Japan’s government has legalised casinos, but they are not popular

4% of GDP

MOST forms of gambling are banned in Japan, but many Japanese still like to have a flutter. Over ¥23trn ($203bn) is waged annually on pachinko, a noisy variant of pinball. Add in lottery tickets, plus horse, boat and bicycle racing—the only other types of betting allowed—and you have a vast industry. Pachinko players alone spend more than the combined betting revenue of all the casinos in the world’s top gambling resort, Macau.

Japan’s government has struggled to convince citizens that the current strictures should be relaxed. When the Diet legalised casinos in December after years of political wrangling, a poll by NHK, the country’s public broadcaster, put support for the move at just 12%. The leader of Komeito, a party with Buddhist roots that is part of the governing coalition, voted against the bill. Critics said it would exacerbate problem gambling and attract “anti-social forces”, a euphemism for yakuza gangs.

Shinzo Abe, the prime minister, insists casinos will be only one part of family-friendly resorts, with hotels, shops and conference facilities. In an...Continue reading

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