Nobel-Prize Winning Economist Paul Samuelson on Gambling

“There is a substantial economic case to be made against gambling…it involves simply the sterile transfers of money or goods between individuals, creating no new money or goods. Although it creates no output, gambling does nevertheless absorb time and resources. When pursued beyond the limits of recreation, where the main purpose after all is to “kill time,” gambling subtracts from the national income.”

From Economics, 6th edition, 1970

CkirbyNobel-Prize Winning Economist Paul Samuelson on Gambling