"Bahama Lotto" - Bahamas AI Art
©A. Derek Catalano
Starting a National Lottery in The Bahamas: Possibility, Promise, and Controversy
Introduction
The idea of a national lottery in The Bahamas has been debated for decades. On the surface, it appears simple: citizens buy tickets, winners receive prizes, and the government receives revenue that can fund public services. Many countries use lotteries to support education, infrastructure, sports, and social programs.
However, in The Bahamas the issue is far more complex. Gambling has long been politically, culturally, and religiously sensitive. Casinos exist for tourists, but historically Bahamian citizens were prohibited from participating in most forms of legal gambling. At the same time, underground gambling systems known as “numbers houses” or “web shops” became widespread and deeply embedded in the local economy.
The country even held a national referendum in 2013 asking citizens whether web shops should be legalized and whether a national lottery should be created. Both proposals were rejected by voters.
Because of this history, any discussion about starting a lottery must consider legal, economic, political, moral, and social factors. The question is not simply whether a lottery could exist. The deeper question is whether it should.
This essay examines whether starting a national lottery in The Bahamas is feasible, how it could work, whether it should go to referendum, and the potential benefits and risks for the country.