Initially proposed to cope with debt from the Nine Years’ War (1689-97), the Million Adventure offered 100,000 tickets at £10 each.
The Million Adventure was also a saving program, in that it paid ticket holders a £1 per year until 1710, or a 6.15 percent annual return.
Harold Wilson, then the shadow chancellor of the Exchequer, called Premium Bonds a “squalid raffle,” but the British people rushed to buy them.
Today about one in three Britons owns Premium Bonds.
It has taken longer for prize-linked savings to catch on in the United States, but it’s happening.
Persons:
we’re, Benjamin Franklin, Murphy, Harold Wilson, Truist’s
Organizations:
American Gaming Association, Sports, Britons, Bonds, InTouch Credit Union of, Yotta Technologies
Locations:
U.S, United Kingdom, British, Denmark, Ireland, New Zealand, Sweden, United States, InTouch Credit Union of Plano , Texas