Yes but if inflation meant £3 Scottish = £2 English the price hasn't actually gone up, has it? And if wages rose with inflation and prices went up due to inflation even know everyone is paying more they're actually not paying any more than they would of previously? A lot of hypotheticals there I know.barcode wrote:That goes agaist the white paper view the cost of a ticket would stay the same, we could end up paying £3 Scottish pound to £2 English pound. Also the Euro doesn't pay out money to good causes etc does it?Critique wrote:I shall drag this over here to stop derailing the thread on TVf further:
I'm not 100% sure but surely this wouldn't be the case? The EuroMillions prize isn't paid out in £s to winners in all other participating countries, is it? So surely the same would apply here and the prize would be converted at the exchange rate from the GBP to the Scottish currency?barcode wrote:The only way for the National lottery to even be possible would be a currency union![]()
In the UK at least around 30% of EuroMillions revenue goes to good causes.