I expected better from a forum for quants.
APalley, how would the state make money if they gave out more than they received?
ferdowsi, here is a simple thought experiment to assist you with this basic probabilistic concept:
Say it is Tuesday, and the jackpot is at 460M. Say no one wins. Now, they base the next jackpot on projected ticket sales, and they for some reason only project a SINGLE ticket sale for Friday night's drawing. The Friday night jackpot is now $460,000,000.50. Say you happen to have the only ticket, and after cash value/tax the jackpot is 250M. What is your EV? 250,000,000/175711536 = 1.42 > 1!! Did the state make a profit? Of course! From the previous weeks combined they made 460M, and from this week they made .50, plus applicable taxes. Now extend this....
The flaw in your thinking is that you are equating the fact that the state will never pay out more than they bring in, with the EV of a ticket, which are 2 totally different things.
Of course, the actual EV is still ALWAYS way under $1 per ticket. But this has NOTHING to do with whether or not the state makes money! It has everything to do with the jackpot differential between consecutive lotteries. A higher jackpot differential implies more tickets sold. The number of tickets sold tends to increase super-linearly. It is a simple binomial distribution: If the jackpot differential is 50M, then ~100M tickets were sold. The odds of winning the entire jackpot
alone is 1: 310,429,942.4. The number of outstanding tickets affects the odds of being the sole winner of the jackpot exponentially (the first derivative of the binomial distribution) :
Now for any of these cases, if you take the EV of each possibility (0 winners, 1 winner (you), 2 winners (you plus another)...) and add them you will never get > 1.
The only way it can ever happen is if the (previous jackpot + number of new tix sold/2) is greater than 1/Binomial(new number of tickets sold), which will never happen in practice due to the superlinear nature of ticket sales.
It would be prudent to refrain from personal attacks in your posts.