Mise
isle of lucy
Yes, we have rollovers. But your math is wrong.

I have no idea what you think you mean by this.First, you have to buy a ticket every drawing, so every drawing is an independent event.
The UK lottery is a 1 in 14 million of having the correct numbers. Obviously, this isn't the probability that you'll walk away with the jackpot.Most lotteries have odds of about, generically, 1 in 200 million.
No it's not. Your expected payout is not greater than your cost.So yes, when the prize is 210 million, its economically rational in that your expected payout is greater than your cost.
This is all factored into the concept of "expected return". You know what Expectation Value means, right?But wait, you're also not factoring in the likelihood that you share the winning lottery number with someone else, which becomes more likely the more folks in the game and even moreso if you play with numbers < 31 (birthdays people...)
Then we're in agreement...In short, it is the rarest of the rare lotteries that is economically rational. I know of 2 in the last 8 years.
EDIT: Ooh! 1000th post!