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U.S. casino operators seeking to get in on Japan's nascent gambling resorts

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Photo: REUTERS file

A year has elapsed since the approval of the law permitting the creation of so-called integrated resorts, which will incorporate Japan's first legal gambling casinos.

Expectations are high that the new IRs will contribute to tax revenues and provide new employment opportunities, although deep-rooted resistance remains due to concerns that they may attract high rollers with a gambling dependency.

Yukan Fuji (Aug 18) reports that American majors in the gambling trade have been turning on the pressure to provide management knowhow through local tie-ups. On July 24, a seminar was held in Everett Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston. Chris Gordon, president of Wynn Resorts Development Japan, informed assembled members of the Japanese media that "We hope to get involved in projects in such major cities as Tokyo, Osaka, Yokohama," and that he expected the resorts would create as many as 16,000 jobs.

The venue for the press event was "Encore Boston Harbor Resort." In response to local concerns over a possible increase in crime, Wynn had agreed to foot the bill for 20 additional members on the local police payroll. It also reportedly paid out over $65 million for roads in the area in the lead-up to its opening in June of this year.

Part of the message Wynn was hoping to convey to the nervous Japanese was that the resort had won approval of residents of the nearby academic district, where Harvard University and other institutions are located, just 6.5 kilometers away.

Wynn is said to have set its sights on a project to be located in Osaka Prefecture. Other U.S. rival firms, including MGM Resorts International -- which has reportedly tied up with Orix Corporation -- and Las Vegas Sands, are said to also be vying for influence here.

Efforts by American majors are not limited to big cities. In June, Connecticut-based Mohegan Gaming & Entertainment announced it had made proposals for summer resorts accessible from Tokyo, Seoul and Shanghai, as well as entry into Tomakomai City in Hokkaido, where skiing can be enjoyed in winter. Florida-based Hard Rock International, which currently operates 11 hotel casinos worldwide, is also said to considering a Hokkaido venue.

An industry expert tells Yukan Fuji one of the factors behind efforts to make headway in Japan is that "casino demand in Las Vegas has peaked, and further expansion there has become difficult."

Wary over the problem of gambling dependency, Japan's IR law provide for such measures as restricting casino entry to thrice weekly or a maximum of 10 times a month. In addition, Japan residents will be charged a casino entry fee of 6,000 yen per adult.

Dr Bo Barnhard, an authority on gambling addiction on the faculty of the University of Nevada Las Vegas, pointed out how Singapore, after opening its first casino in 2010, adopted various countermeasures and treatments to deal with gambling addition. As a result, gambling-related problems incurred at the workplace or in personal relationships subsequently declined in the island nation "to a level below what existed prior to the legalization of gambling," Barnhard said, adding, "Japan can also harness this kind of foreign knowhow."

As new integrated resorts begin operating from the first half of the 2020s, one of the pending major issues will be how Japan's national and local governments harness various precautionary measures to alleviate these concerns.

© Japan Today

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4 Comments
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Actually involving an American company makes sense, since if anything goes badly wrong, the Japanese will have someone else to blame.

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The Sands casino in Singapore is operated by an American company........

Yes that's exactly my point, they "lobbied" their way in both the Singapore and Japanese government in order to get the permits to build megacasinos nobody asked for and create all kinds of problems.

But hey as long as the fatcats on top receive their bags of SGD's and Yens who cares if the local communities are suffering...

1 ( +1 / -0 )

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The Sands casino in Singapore is operated by an American company........

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Dr Bo Barnhard, an authority on gambling addiction on the faculty of the University of Nevada Las Vegas, pointed out how Singapore, after opening its first casino in 2010, adopted various countermeasures and treatments to deal with gambling addition. As a result, gambling-related problems incurred at the workplace or in personal relationships subsequently declined in the island nation "to a level below what existed prior to the legalization of gambling," Barnhard said, adding, "Japan can also harness this kind of foreign knowhow."

How about stating the obvious  Dr Barnhard from Las vegas by simply saying if you don't open these American owned mega casinos in Japan you won't have these problems in the first place.

But I know your checks won't clear in that case...

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