By Ng Jing Yng, TODAY | Posted: 30 July 2011 0628 hrs
SINGAPORE: The presence of the Integrated Resorts (IRs) here has
not caused a spike in the number of gambling addicts, said Casino
Regulatory Authority (CRA) chairman Richard Magnus on Friday, citing a
study done by the Institute of Mental Health.
Speaking at a
question and answer session at the 23rd Singapore Law Review Annual
Lecture, Mr Magnus said that the study concluded that gambling addiction
numbers before and after the establishment of the IRs remained the
same.
What the IRs did, though, was provide "just another avenue for gambling", said Mr Magnus.
He added: "The thinking is that some of these gamblers moved away from the traditional gambling areas and move into casinos."
Responding
to a question on the social impact of casinos, CRA chief executive Lau
Peet Meng, who was also at the event, revealed that the authorities are
studying overseas models where it is compulsory for gamblers to declare
how much they want to lose before they step into the casino.
Currently, patrons to the IRs here can voluntarily cap their gambling outlay.
On
the call for greater transparency with regard to the number of
Singaporeans entering the casinos, Mr Lau agreed that this could be
looked into.
"It is ... probably one of the aspects of the
(Casino Control) Act (that) we need to look at more carefully, which is
the legality of the information and how the information shared can be
used," he said.
But Mr Magnus reiterated: "I can perhaps give you
the assurance that the local urban legend that quite a number of our
locals or PRs frequent the casinos ... is just a legend."
Mr Magnus noted that several challenges lie ahead in the regulation of the IRs.
Apart
from the "creative ways of money laundering", the casino industry might
also change in the years ahead from one that is incentivised to
self-regulate - due to the high profits - to one where the industry
turns stale.
Earlier in his speech, Mr Magnus also said that,
while the authorities hope that the IRs are "mature participants who see
the value of self-regulation ... we cannot discount the possibility of
market failure".
He added that there will be occasions where the
casino operators and regulator will not view self-disclosure as a
win-win situation and that will be when CRA needs to intervene. - TODAY
The gambling addicts are always there, whether there is the IR or not.
Actually because of the casinos, the gambling addiction is now openly addressed. And with this, more addicts are surfacing for treatment.
It is because of the casino, the The National Council for Problem Gambling stepped up its programmes and more addicts are coming out for treatment. Not that the casinos are creating more addicts.
It the government gives out more free health checks, would that means the government is making more people sick? No free health check not many patients, got free health check suddenly a lot of patients.
wad shit they talking?
tryin hard not to pick up the responsibilty - PAP policy?
they are telling a joke again
they are trying to say that it is mostly foreigners who go to casino and lose money and the casinos are doing a good job in sucking money from overseas to singapore