The growth of sports betting in Malawi: corporate strategies, public space and public health - PubMed (original) (raw)

The growth of sports betting in Malawi: corporate strategies, public space and public health

C Bunn et al. Public Health. 2020 Jul.

Free article

Abstract

Objectives: Gambling is increasingly positioned as a public health issue, with links to a wide range of harms for individuals, communities and societies. Malawi has experienced a rapid rise in the availability of high street and online sports betting services, situated in a context of extreme inequality and poverty. We aim to document the strategies through which a leading sports betting firm have established a market worth MK2.1bn, to inform future initiatives to mitigate gambling-related harm.

Study design: A case study of strategies deployed by a leading firm to grow a sports betting market in Malawi.

Methods: We undertook a qualitative media analysis of articles from six major Malawian news outlets and combined this with photographic evidence relating to company advertising and presence in Malawian public space. Data were analysed thematically and triangulated to generate a typology of corporate strategies.

Results: We collected 39 articles and 15 photographs. After we screened the articles, we analysed 27 and identified seven corporate strategies: adopt a mobile network franchise model; use media coverage; purchase high-visibility advertising; sponsor locally; build association with (European) football; appeal to aspects of hegemonic masculinity; construct narratives of individual and collective benefit.

Conclusion: Malawi has been exposed to a sophisticated set of corporate strategies aimed at growing a sports betting market. These strategies have been successful, and it is likely that a range of foreseeable gambling-related harms are affecting Malawi. We offer suggestions for how policy-makers and public health professionals might respond.

Keywords: Gambling; Inequalities; Malawi; Public health; Sports.

Copyright © 2020 The Royal Society for Public Health. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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