Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction Leighton Vaughan Williams
PART I THE ECONOMICS OF RACETRACK BETTING
1. R.M. Griffith (1949), ‘Odds Adjustments by American Horse-Race
Bettors’
2. Wayne W. Snyder (1978), ‘Horse Racing: Testing the Efficient
Markets Model’
3. Richard H. Thaler and William T. Ziemba (1988), ‘Anomalies.
Parimutuel Betting Markets: Racetracks and Lotteries’
4. Jack Dowie (1976), ‘On the Efficiency and Equity of Betting
Markets’
5. Richard E. Quandt (1986), ‘Betting and Equilibrium’
6. Joe Golec and Maurry Tamarkin (1998), ‘Bettors Love Skewness,
Not Risk, at the Horse Track’
7. William Hurley and Lawrence McDonough (1995), ‘A Note on the
Hayek Hypothesis and the Favourite-Longshot Bias in Parimutuel
Betting’
8. Michael A. Smith, David Paton and Leighton Vaughan Williams
(2006), ‘Market Efficiency in Person-to-Person Betting’
9. Hyun Song Shin (1991), ‘Optimal Betting Odds against Insider
Traders’
10. Leighton Vaughan Williams and David Paton (1997), ‘Why is There
a Favourite-Longshot Bias in British Racetrack Betting
Markets?’
11. N.F.R. Crafts (1985), ‘Some Evidence of Insider Knowledge in
Horse Race Betting in Britain’
12. Leighton Vaughan Williams (1999), ‘Information Efficiency in
Betting Markets: A Survey’
13. M. Sung and J.E.V. Johnson (2010), ‘Revealing Weak-Form
Inefficiency in a Market for State Contingent Claims: The
Importance of Market Ecology, Modelling Procedures and Investment
Strategies’
14. Ruth N. Bolton and Randall G. Chapman (1986), ‘Searching for
Positive Returns at the Track: A Multinomial Logit Model for
Handicapping Horse Races’
15. Kelly Busche and Christopher D. Hall (1988), ‘An Exception to
the Risk Preference Anomaly’
PART II THE ECONOMICS OF SPORTS BETTING
16. Michael Cain, David Law and David Peel (2000), ‘The
Favourite-Longshot Bias and Market Efficiency in UK Football
Betting’
17. David Paton and Leighton Vaughan Williams (2005), ‘Forecasting
Outcomes in Spread Betting Markets: Can Bettors Use “Quarbs” to
Beat the Book?’
18. Colin F. Camerer (1989), ‘Does the Basketball Market Believe in
the “Hot Hand”?’
19. William O. Brown and Raymond D. Sauer (1993), ‘Does the
Basketball Market Believe in the “Hot Hand”? Comment’
20. Steven D. Levitt (2004), ‘Why are Gambling Markets Organised so
Differently from Financial Markets?’
PART III THE ECONOMICS OF GAMING AND CASINO GAMBLING
21. William R. Eadington (1999), ‘The Economics of Casino
Gambling’
22. Daniel B. Suits (1979), ‘The Elasticity of Demand for
Gambling’
23. John E. Anderson (2005), ‘Casino Taxation in the United
States’
24. David Paton, Donald S. Siegel and Leighton Vaughan Williams
(2002), ‘A Policy Response to the E-Commerce Revolution: The Case
of Betting Taxation in the UK’
25. David Paton, Donald S. Siegel and Leighton Vaughan Williams
(2004), ‘Taxation and the Demand for Gambling: New Evidence from
the United Kingdom’
26. Ricardo Gazel (1998), ‘The Economic Impacts of Casino Gambling
at the State and Local Levels’
27. Donald Siegel and Gary Anders (2001), ‘The Impact of Indian
Casinos on State Lotteries: A Case Study of Arizona’
28. Donald S. Elliott and John C. Navin (2002), ‘Has Riverboat
Gambling Reduced State Lottery Revenue’
29. Douglas M. Walker and John D. Jackson (2008), ‘Do U.S. Gambling
Industries Cannibalize Each Other?’
30. Chad Cotti (2008), ‘The Effect of Casinos on Local Labor
Markets: A Country Level Analysis’
31. Patricia B. Reagan and Robert J. Gitter (2007), ‘Is Gaming the
Optimal Strategy? The Impact of Gaming Facilities on the Income and
Employment of American Indians’
PART IV THE ECONOMICS OF NATIONAL AND STATE LOTTERIES
32. Dek Terrell (1994), ‘A Test of the Gambler’s Fallacy: Evidence
from Pari-mutuel Games’
33. Charles T. Clotfelter and Philip J. Cook (1991), ‘Lotteries in
the Real World’
34. Charles T. Clotfelter and Philip J. Cook (1993), ‘Notes: The
“Gambler’s Fallacy” in Lottery Play’
35. Jonathan Guryan and Melissa S. Kearney (2008), ‘Gambling at
Lucky Stores: Empirical Evidence from State Lottery Sales’
36. Thomas A. Garrett and Russell S. Sobel (1999), ‘Gamblers Favor
Skewness, Not Risk: Further Evidence from United States’ Lottery
Games’
37. David Forrest, Robert Simmons and Neil Chesters (2002), ‘Buying
a Dream: Alternative Models of Demand for Lotto’
38. Richard Thalheimer and Mukhtar M. Ali (1995), ‘The Demand for
Pari-mutuel Horse Race Wagering and Attendance’
39. Melissa Schettini Kearney (2005), ‘State Lotteries and Consumer
Behavior’
40. Kent R. Grote and Victor A. Matheson (2006), ‘Dueling Jackpots:
Are Competing Lotto Games Complements or Substitutes?’
Edited by Leighton Vaughan Williams, Professor of Economics and Finance and Director, Betting Research Unit, Nottingham Business School, Nottingham Trent University, UK
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