Community Corner

Show Me The Money? Here's How Much Missouri Spends On the Lottery

You're odds of winning the Mega Millions are about 1 in 303 million. So, you're telling me there's a chance?

MISSOURI — The odds of winning the lottery are abysmally low. So low, in fact, you’re more likely to be struck by lightning, crushed by a meteor, or hit by falling airplane debris than to be holding the record-breaking $1.6 billion Mega Millions ticket Tuesday night.

But that won’t deter many in Missouri from buying boatloads of one-way tickets to wealth. We spend on average $1.29 billion a year on lottery tickets every year, or about $211 per person. That's less than the national average of $313 per person, according to the personal finance website MoneyWise.com, but it's still a chunk of change.

The chances you wake up Wednesday with a billion dollars is unfathomably low at 1 in 303 million, according to the report, published Sunday. And some states spend a lot more on the lottery than others. In fact, the average adult in some states spends as much as two or three times the national average.

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Here are the top 10 states in lottery spending, as well as how much each adult shells out on average.

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  1. Massachusetts, $977.71
  2. West Virginia, $741.40
  3. Rhode Island, $643.54
  4. Delaware, $548.13
  5. New York, $539.63
  6. Georgia, $529.71
  7. New Jersey, $449.22
  8. Maryland, $413.71
  9. Connecticut, $413.05
  10. South Carolina, $396.99

MoneyWise.com noted its unwise to buy up lottery tickets in the hopes of striking it rich overnight. Instead, you should put that money into stocks where you’d see “fairly sizable returns.” Americans spent a collective $72.7 billion on lottery tickets in 2016. Had everyone simply pooled their money together and put it into stocks that year, it would’ve grown to just under $99 billion by the end of 2017.

To put it in individual terms, had the average American invested that $313 rather than spend it on lottery tickets, the authors estimated it would’ve turned into more than $425 by the end of 2017.

"When you invest, you're benefiting from compound interest — you're giving your money a chance to grow, and then for those gains to grow, and so on," wrote Mike Allen, portfolio manager at Wealthsimple.

And if that doesn’t convince you to avoid that shiny golden ticket, maybe this will: Researchers at the Stockholm University and New York University found that while you’ll feel more satisfied in life with oodles of cash, you probably won’t be happier.

“Life satisfaction” refers to how people feel about the quality of their lives overall, whereas ‘happiness’ measured respondents’ day-to-day feelings, Robert Ostling, an associate professor at Stockholm University, told MarketWatch. “Our results suggest it is more difficult to affect happiness than life satisfaction,” he said.

Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

Image via Shutterstock

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