Contact us
CALL US NOW 1-888-GOLD-160
(1-888-465-3160)

Wildest Inflation Red Flag: Vegas Table Limits

  by    0   4

Anyone who has been to a restaurant, a grocery store, or the car lot during the Biden administration can’t deny the reality of inflation. But despite what the federal government is saying about the success of its anti-inflation efforts red flags for inflation keep popping up in the strangest places.

Take the Las Vegas Strip. Casinos on the Strip, long known for trying to take the money of everyone from the highest high-rolling whale to the coupon-clipping low-roller camped out at Motel 6 or Excalibur Casino, are now finally admitting that some dollars aren’t worth the effort of taking. In August, the Wall Street Journal reported on the declining number of tables where you could play blackjack in Las Vegas while the amount of revenue earned from blackjack stayed high even as casinos offered worse rules to players, such as paying out 6:5 when a player receives a “blackjack” rather than the traditional 3:2. Strip casinos are also doing away with low table limits, meaning that players that want to risk $5 or $10 on a single hand of blackjack are struggling to find a game.

The optimistic interpretation offered by the article is that casinos on the strip are successfully pivoting to cater to a higher-end audience and are raising not just table limits for games like blackjack but also the price of hotel rooms. But the disappearance of low-priced gambling options is happening at places far from the glamorous Las Vegas Strip. Even 

And it’s not just table game limits where casinos are desperate for more money. Even classic games are seeing their rules rewritten to bring in more dollars per player. While the version of roulette familiar from Hollywood offers 18 red numbers, 18 black numbers, a single green zero where the house wins, Vegas casinos now commonly offer roulette wheels with three zeros, massively increasing the house edge. The Strip is not the only gambling destinations where dollars don’t go as far as they used to with many casinos even removing table games as a way to respond to high inflation and labor costs. (Vegas is a union town. Pass Casino in Henderson and many Caesars Entertainment properties are among those eliminating or scaling back table games. 

Even lotto tickets, perhaps the most affordable way to gamble, are seeing prices rise. The state of Texas is now selling a $100 scratch-off ticket and the Georgia Lottery is experimenting with discontinuing the selling of $1 lottery tickets and replacing them with with $2 or $5 tickets, a doubling or even “pentupling” the cost of tickets for gamblers looking for quick and cheap entertainment.  

When even purveyors of traditional vices start turning down dollars, it’s hard to feel bullish about the currency. Is holding the US dollar turning into a gamble all on its own?

Download SchiffGold's Why Buy Gold Free Report

Get Peter Schiff’s key gold headlines in your inbox every week – click here – for a free subscription to his exclusive weekly email updates.
Interested in learning how to buy gold and buy silver?
Call 1-888-GOLD-160 and speak with a Precious Metals Specialist today!

Related Posts

To Prevent a Banking Crisis, the FED Must Cut

In 2009, 140 banks failed, and a recent report from financial consulting firm Klaros Group says that hundreds of banks are at risk of going under this year. It’s being billed mostly as a danger for individuals and communities than for the broader economy, but for stressed lenders across America, a string of small bank failures could quite […]

READ MORE →

Inflation Brewing: Is Coffee the Next Cocoa?

Cocoa prices have dumped since rocketing to a dramatic peak last month as an El Nino cycle winds down and traders rush out of the illiquid market. For now, depreciating fiat currencies are still keeping the cocoa price still far above its 2023 levels. Coffee has had a similar rise and subsequent correction — but now, inflation and other factors are conspiring to […]

READ MORE →

California’s Single-Family Zoning Exemplifies the Market-Intervention Problem

California’s government bet that they knew better than the free market. And now millions are paying the price. The story begins in 1919, when the city of Berkley, California instituted legislation setting aside districts that would only allow the construction of single-family housing. The idea spread, and soon much of California’s urban areas had adopted the zoning policy. Today, approximately 40% of the total land in Los Angeles is […]

READ MORE →

“Safe Haven” Yen Trending Towards Zero Against Gold

The yen was once known as a safe-haven currency for investors to protect themselves when broader markets are shaky or other currencies are dropping, but those days are numbered. A stable government and consistent (and low) interest rates have been some of the driving factors, but it’s the unwinding of that ultra-low interest rate policy that will be the yen’s “safe […]

READ MORE →

Made in America: The Dark Forces Promoting American Manufacturing

Whenever an election year rolls around, domestic manufacturing becomes a more central theme of discussion. Candidates from both sides, who seem to disagree on almost everything else, never waver in their commitment to auto manufacturers in Detroit and the steel industry. Republicans and Democrats never forget to remind the American public that they will try […]

READ MORE →

Comments are closed.

Call Now