​Rise of scratchcards means National Lottery giving proportionally less money than ever to charities, MPs warn

Fewer people are playing the traditional lottery so the proportion of sales given to good causes is falling
Fewer people are playing the traditional lottery so the proportion of sales given to good causes is falling

The rising popularity of scratchcards means the National Lottery is giving away a lower proportion of its total sales income​ to charity​ than ever before​ while the profits for the company that runs it have soared, MPs have warned.​

The Public Accounts Select Committee said that Camelot's profits have risen by 122 per cent since 2009, “well in excess” of what was expected when it was given the licence to run the lottery.

But in the past year, returns for good causes fell by 15 per cent to £1.63billion, a record low in proportion to total sales. Camelot has forecast a further fall in income for good causes this year.

The MPs warned the fall in funding for charities could be "disastrous" and mean...

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