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What would you do if you won a lottery? Sample interview answers

Show me a single person who has never dreamed of picking the right numbers, and winning a lottery. Main prize, big payday, ten million at least . Finally a chance do dash the job you’ve hated for so long, to pay your debts, to buy the things you always wanted to own, and to enjoy a dream life –or at least your vision of a dream life…

Just like with so many other things in life, however, the visualization of a dream is typically better than the reality of it . Because man is a creative creature, there is more happiness in giving than in getting, and a life on a deck of a sailing boat, or in a shade of an umbrella on a tropical island with a glass of a fresh orange juice in your hand (or in a hand of beautiful lady), gets boring after a few weeks, or after a few months.

Anyway, it is an interesting interview question, and an interesting topic for an essay at school, because your answer tells a lot about your maturity, attitude to work and life , and also about your motivation and loyalty to the employer. Let’s have a look at some interesting sample answers . Do not forget to read also the notes below the answers to understand how to make the best impression on your interviewers.

7 sample answers to “What would you do if you won a lottery (a million dollars)?” interview question

  • I’d probably throw in a big party, a celebration, and maybe go for a six months trip around the world. To reset my batteries, to learn more about other cultures and people, to think about the best use for the money, Once over, however, I’d resume my old walks of life . I see a meaningful purpose in my profession, and I would still continue in the field of social work. Who knows, if I won a lottery, and connected with the right people, perhaps I might invest the money in an interesting project, NGO, something that would have a big impact in our country, or at least in this city. But even if I decided to do so, I would stay involved in social work. Just my position in the process might change…
  • I never participate in lotteries , so there is no chance to win one for me. I prefer to rely on my responsibility, motivation and hard work , when trying to achieve something for me and my family. It’s not my cup of coffee to bet on luck, and to dream about millions. Honestly, I do not even support lotteries. It’s just not good for humanity. People should do jobs they enjoy doing . They should see a meaning in their everyday life. If you see such a meaning, and enjoy your roles in life, you won’t participate in lotteries or dream about winning millions of dollars.
  • 10 million is a lot of money, and a big responsibility . It may seem like a cliche, but I would likely give it away , to people who need it the most. I might start my own NGO, or donate the money to some existing NGOs. Of course I’d buy a nice house and car and whatever, and maybe spend 1 million for myself. But the rest I will give away, and I definitely won’t quit my job . Spending money can be fun, but it won’t bring you real happiness. Only helping the others, and using your energy to create something valuable, can bring real happiness to life.
  • I would definitely start my own business . Maybe a big restaurant with top quality plant based food, with a great vibe and happy staff. I’d love to help people to improve their health by improving their diet. It’s one of the reasons why I chose a career of a dietitian and applied for this job with you. If I had ten millions, however, I would have an opportunity to try and change something to better in my own business. While I do not have the money, I am happy to apply for a job of a dietitian in your organization, trying to help people from my position in your team.

* Do not forget to check also : Great answers to 15 most common interview questions .

  • I would buy this amazing company from you . I like it here so much–the quality of the services you provide to your clients, the reputation of the place, the atmosphere in the workplace. It’s just amazing. With my present bank account balance, however, the most I can hope for is to get a job here –and it certainly doesn’t sound like a bad proposition to me… If I won a million, or ten million, I might try to buy the company, or at least become your business partner.
  • I’d try to make some impact in the world. Some positive difference . I have not thought about it yet, in which way I could contribute the most. Maybe do something to help stop the global warming, or to stop the deforestation. But I also see things realistically–10 million isn’t really a lot of money when we look at the global business and the money some international corporations make while destroying the planet. Anyway, I am no dreamer and I do not consider myself a Messiah or something similar. I’d try to make some impact, maybe just in one country or even in one community. That’s the most I can hope for from my position, and 10 million would not change much about it.
  • I would likely invest the money in real estate and commodities . Just guaranteed and safe investments, at least when you invest for ten years or more. And I will continue in my profession , because that’s what I enjoy doing, and want to do. To be honest, I am happy with my life and with what I have . Winning a lottery will not change much for me–at least that’s what I think. I have never been a slave of money and do not want to become one. Of course it is nice to have something in your bank account, and money give you opportunity to change something to better in your life and in the world. But we should never get obsessed with them or attached to them. In my opinion, someone obsessed with money can never be happy in their life . Regardless of how much they have, or win.

Ensure them that you do not work for money only

Saying that you’d quit your job immediately after winning the lottery is the same like saying that you work only for money . And you should never make such an impression on your interviewers.

Tell them that you see a meaningful purpose in your job or profession , and would stay in the field, regardless of your bank account balance. Of course, you might change your position if you won a million, let alone ten million . Instead of working for a company you might start one, or you might actually work for free in a place of your choice.

But you won’t simply stop working, and enjoy the rest of your life traveling and spending money on expensive and shiny things. At least that’s what you should say in an interview ;). What you would do with the ten million in reality should remain your secret…

* Special Tip : This isn’t the only tricky question you will face while interviewing for any decent job. You will face questions about prioritization, dealing with pressure, dealing with ambiguity , and other tricky scenarios that happen in the workplace. If you want to make sure that you stand out with your answers and outclass your competitors, have a look at our Interview Success Package . Up to 10 premium answers to 31 tricky scenario based questions (+ more) will make your life much easier in the interviews. Thank you for checking it out!

if i won the lottery i would essay

Having a lot of money is not bad–as long as you want to use them to make some positive change in the world

Another option is referring to some positive impact you want to make with your money . Perhaps giving them away to an NGO, or start a non-profit organization yourself, or just contribute here and there, perhaps with your work when you now do not need to care about the bills anymore.

Ensure the interviewers that you are well aware that money doesn’t bring happiness . Using money to help someone, however, or to make some impact in the world, or in a local community, can bring happiness to your life. And that’s exactly what you would try to do with your lottery winnings. An essay offers an opportunity to describe this in detail, picking a particular cause you’d like to support with your money.

* Another tough questions you may face : Why shouldn’t we hire you?

Investing money and saving for worse days is also a wise choice

You do not necessarily have to say that you would give money to charity, in order to make a good impression on the hiring managers. Many of them would not believe you anyway 🙂 , unless you have a proven track record of working for charity or contributing money to support some good cause regularly.

You can say that you’d invest your money, in stocks, real estate, commodities , simply in things that will likely grow in value in next decades, and bring you some nice residual income . But you would not quit working and enjoy an early retirement. That’s not your style. You would continue in your field, just you wouldn’t need to get paid for your work anymore . That’s a great feeling and it gives you a lot of freedom in your choices…

Ready to answer the question about winning a lottery? I hope so! Check also 7 sample answers to other tricky interview questions :

  • Tell me one thing about yourself you would not want me to know?
  • Give an example of an occasion when you used logic to solve a problem.
  • What makes you unique?
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Matthew Chulaw

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The New York Times

The learning network | what would you do if you won the lottery.

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What Would You Do if You Won the Lottery?

Printing out a Powerball ticket for a customer in Dallas on Tuesday. The Powerball jackpot, $500 million as of Wednesday, is one of the highest amounts ever. <a href="//www.nytimes.com/2015/02/12/upshot/the-case-for-buying-a-powerball-ticket.html">Related Article</a>

Questions about issues in the news for students 13 and older.

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The Powerball jackpot, $500 million as of Wednesday, is one of the highest amounts ever. Do you ever dream about winning the lottery?

What would you do if you won?

In “ The Case for Buying a Powerball Ticket ,” Neil Irwin writes:

Financially literate people like to complain that buying lottery tickets is among the silliest decisions a person could make. And it is true that the odds of winning anything substantial, let alone the estimated $500 million that could be given away if there is a winning ticket in the Powerball lottery Wednesday, are very much stacked against you. There is no doubt that people should not spend money on lottery tickets that they can’t afford to lose. If you have a gambling problem, or are financially destitute, it is a terrible idea. And for anyone to stake his or her financial future on lottery tickets is beyond foolish. But there are a couple of dimensions that these tut-tutted warnings miss, perhaps fueled by a class divide between those who commonly buy lottery tickets and those who choose to throw away money on other things like expensive wine or mansions. As long as one thinks about the purchase of lottery tickets the right way — again, purely a consumption good, not an investment — it can be a completely rational decision. And if you’re going to ever think about buying lottery tickets, a moment like this — when the Powerball jackpot has reached remarkable highs — is the best possible time. The biggest and most generally applicable reason buying lottery tickets is a non-terrible idea is this: It is fun to imagine one’s future after arriving at vast wealth. Who doesn’t daydream about what sorts of houses and cars and airplanes one would buy with the half-billion-dollar Powerball grand prize? (It’s more like around $340 million in cash value terms; the larger number is if the prize is taken as an annual payment.) Fantasizing about what you would do if you suddenly encountered great wealth is fun, and it is more fun if there is some chance, however minuscule, that it could happen. The $2 price for a ticket is a relatively small one to pay for the enjoyment of thinking through how you might organize your life differently if you had all those millions.

Students: Read the entire article, then tell us …

— What would you do if you won the lottery?

— How much of the money would you save, spend and give away?

— How do you think your life would change?

— Do you know anyone who plays the lottery regularly? Will you play the lottery when you get older? What do you think of Mr. Irwin’s reasoning, that buying a lottery ticket is usually a terrible financial investment, but that it can be a completely rational decision if you enjoy dreaming of winning?

Students 13 and older are invited to comment below. Please use only your first name. For privacy policy reasons, we will not publish student comments that include a last name.

Comments are no longer being accepted.

What would you do if you won the lottery? How much of the money would you save, spend and give away?

I have thought about this question for a long time. When you imagine that you won a million dollars, it is easy to make your mind up about what to spend it on. However, with 500 million dollars, anything that I say would seem absurd! Anyway, I would donate 1 million dollars to charity, 4 million to cancer research, and 5 million for aid to Africa. I would save the rest of the money, and use it occasionally to buy stuff. It wouldn’t hurt to put it toward a college fund either.

How do you think your life would change?

I would feel a little more confident, because I would know that I can afford to have a good education, and my family and I are set for life. On the other hand, I have a feeling that other people would ask me for money, and that would be a pain.

Do you know anyone who plays the lottery regularly? Will you play the lottery when you get older? What do you think of Mr. Irwin’s reasoning, that buying a lottery ticket is usually a terrible financial investment, but that it can be a completely rational decision if you enjoy dreaming of winning?

I do not know anyone who plays the lottery, but when I grow up, I might try it out just for kicks. I agree with Mr. Irwin that if someone is poor, they shouldn’t keep buying lottery tickets because the odds that they will win is low. However, if someone already has a paying job and a decent financial basis, it might be fun to occasionally buy that 2 dollar ticket. Two dollars isn’t a steep price to pay for the chance that you may win big.

If I won the 500 million dollar power ball lottery a lot of things would change in my family. I would not only pay of both of my parents houses, I would pay for all my siblings education, I would buy all my siblings cars, and give them a nice lump sum of money to put away for the future. I would do the same for my mom and my dad buy them something really nice and take my whole family on a vacation somewhere tropical. I would give both my parents a lump sum of money as well. I will make sure my parents will never have to work another day in their lives. And for myself of course I would buy a nice big house, then multiple vacation homes around the world, buy myself really nice things like cars. But I would also put 100 million away in savings for when a dark day comes and i’m completely broke. I would also give a couple million to various charities in my state and worldwide as well. My life change drastically if I won the lottery, although my life as it is right now isn’t that bad all. I go on 1 or 2 vacations every year I have a nice house in Rockland county but it will still drastically change my life and my family life forever. I know a lot of people that play the lottery like both of my parents. But I am not old enough to yet buy a lottery ticket since I am only 16, but once I turn 18 and the power ball or the mega millions is a couple million dollars you bet I am going to buy a COUPLE tickets and hope I win!

I would pay off all of my moms fine and my step dads fines. I would move to a different state with my mom,step dad, and siblings. Buy a huge house, buy my mom a car. I would go shopping for the house to get furniture, myself, and family members. After, I would save the rest of my money until the day I die for my siblings.

All the money would go to my family and pay for collage. I think it would make my life (and my family’s) a little easier .

There are a lot of things that I would do if I won the lottery. I know that winning would mean a huge change for me. I would begin by evaluating just how much I won. If I won a seriously substancial amount, like the current jackpot, I would begin by putting half directly into a savings acount that I would only be able to touch when I turned 18. Then, with that money, once I turned 18, I would hire a financial advisor to help me to invest my money. Then, hopefully, I could turn that money into a greater sum of money. With the other half of the money, I would divide it into different parts. One fourth would go to an account that I could spend as I like. A second fourth, I would use to pay for mine and my brother and sister’s college, along with any expenses that come along with it. All the rest of that money would go to my parents and family. I would help by paying off my parent’s loans and bills. Then, I would buy my parents a house of their choosing. With that amount of money, one could potentialy live anywhere in the world. Therefore, I would give them any house they wanted. Not much of my lifestyle would change, however. Everyone has heard stories of people who won the lottery only to become bankrupt only years later. This is because they spend all their winnings on lush, expensive, unnessasary things that they have no use for. I’ve heard stories of people who buy planes, boats, houses all around the world, and more. Buying such unnessesary things is just wasteful. Of course it is nice to have luxaries, but if it means spending all your money on things you don’t need, I dont believe it is a good idea. I would definetly still go to college, even though with the amount of money I would recieve from winning the lottery would mean I wouldn’t need to work ever again. If for some reason I would loose all the money, I would want to make sure I would still be able to make money for myself. The article also talks about the risks involved with buying a lottery ticket. Buying a lottery ticket is a form of gambling, so with any type of gambling, I believe it should only be used for fun.

To me, winning the lottery would be a life changing experience. There is a one in a million chance I would be able to win but it is still fun to think about what I would do if I won five hundred million dollars. If I won the lottery there are so many things I would want to do with the money, I would go on a two week vacation to Bora Bora, then I would travel Greece. After my traveling is done, I would build a pool in my backyard and put an extension on my house. I would also give one million dollars to cancer research and another one million to charity. With the money I have left I would put it in the bank and save it to help pay for college and for any other time my family or I need it. I would travel to Bora Bora and Greece for many different reasons. I have always wanted to go to Bora Bora because I love the beach, even though the flight is long it will be worth it once you step onto the island. From pictures and TV shows it looks absolutely beautiful, the water looks insanely clear and the sand looks super soft. I would go snorkeling, scuba diving and stay in a villa right on the water. I would also like to travel to Greece because Greece also looks beautiful. There are many different areas you can go sight seeing, you can try new food and also visit there beaches. Bora Bora and Greece would definitely be two places I would travel to if I won the lottery. Two other things I would do are build a pool in my backyard and add an extension in my house. I have always wanted a pool in my backyard for hot summer days where I can just sit by the pool and relax, so a pool would be nice. It would also be cool to add an extension to my house because I would build a bigger bed room for each of my family members and also build a hang out room so when my friends come over we have a place to hang out. I would give one million dollars to cancer research because we need to find a cure for cancer, and I would give another one million dollars to charity, because it is always good to give back to others when you can. I would then save the rest of my money and give a large amount to my parents and put the rest in the bank for college. If I won the lottery not only would my life change drastically but my family’s life would also change.

Wow, half a billion dollars does sound good right about now. People can only dream about what it feels like to have that much money. And to think that it would only cost two dollars to receive all that money is crazy. The lotto is a good way for someone to become rich fast; however, if they are too lenient with their cash prize, they could end up bankrupt. I personally enjoy the lottery, although I am too young myself to actually play it right now I sometimes “help” my dad try to win. He would come home with a ticket and I would nag him to check his numbers every day until the drawings were made. We would lose every time but that did not take away the fun we had memorizing our numbers and checking every night until the drawing was, anxiously awaiting for our numbers to be called. Powerball was not the only type of lottery my family enjoyed. Occasionally, about two to three times a year, my dad would bring home one scratch off game. We never won big but the small winnings of a dollar or due fueled us to get more. Using only the money won from previous scratch off’s, we would but more and more. Slowly we watched our one or two dollar investment grow slowly but surely. In about a week we would have about ten dollars and try for one of those more expensive scratch off games. Here we usually lose all our money and do not win a thing ending our little run. It is okay because we had fun playing and using our money the right way. Yes it is gambling; however we ( my dad) play conservatively with little risk and high rewards. Because of our little risk, there is a small chance of us really winning big. People realize that the bigger the risk, the more of a chance to win and play the lottery consistently and pay high prices. This would be an example of not doing it correctly. This form of playing the lottery just feeds the prize money. It increases your chance of winning yes; however, the chance that one set of numbers to actually win is so small that you would need to pay drastic amounts of money to change your winning probability ever so slightly. If I were to ever win the lottery I would so overwhelmed at first. I would obviously try to save some and not spend it all in one day but I would also want to buy so many things I do not know if I could control myself. I would first buy a bigger home. I always wanted a bigger house; however, I do not want too big of a house where it feels like there is too much house and not enough persons to live in it. As a soon to be graduating high school student, I plan to go to college so I would also like to save enough money to pay off not only my tuitions but also my two sisters two. There would be a bunch of personal items like a pool and a huge television that would be on my wish list, if only I could win this lottery.

I have always dreamed of winning the lottery and have even had plenty of conversations about it with my family and friends. Although it would never happen, it would be a very great experience. Me personally, I would buy a car the first day I won because that is what I am currently saving up for right now. If I were to win the lottery I wouldn’t want anyone to know because I wouldn’t want to be used or thought of differently by my friends or family. Of course, I would help out both my friends and family but they wouldn’t need to know exactly where my money came from. I also would continue my life as normal. I would pursue my future in finance/marketing and continue my life completely normally. I would still go to high school and college. I would even still get an everyday job, because it would get very boring sitting home and doing nothing everyday. There’s only so much you can do while sitting at home and I would want to live a normal life. The first thing I would do with my money is to put half of it into the bank and eight million dollars into three separate accounts for my future kids. I would also give a lot of money to my parents so they could finally retire a little early and make their lives a little easier. I would also give my brother and sister a lot of money so that way no one in my family will ever have to struggle their way through life, financially wise, ever again. My life would change in many ways because I would have a sort of “endless” supply of money and what used to be a tough part about being a sixteen year old kid would no longer ne as much of a struggle for me. I agree with Mr.Irwin’s reasoning, that buying a lottery ticket is usually a terrible financial investment, but that it can be a completely rational decision if you enjoy dreaming of winning. Of course, if you cannot afford it, it is a terrible idea but if money is not a HUGE problem, playing the lottery every once in a while can be a very enjoyable thing. The cost of lottery tickets begins to add up over time, and it can be a very unnecessary expense for most people that can use the money. But playing the lottery can also be very fun and enjoyable. When I get older, I plan on playing the lottery occasionally and when the jackpot raises to an extensively high number, I plan on playing it with a group of friends with the dream of one day possibly winning.

The power ball jackpot is at five hindered million dollars and my parents both bought a ticket. My family does not waste money on the lottery regularly because the odds of winning are so slim that it is a poor financial investment. However, i I was to win the lottery, I would be smart with my money. I would take the twenty year payout so that I could get more money. After taxes that is still about fifteen million dollars a year. If I were to put that money in the bank at a one point seven interest rate, I would make two and a half million dollars in the first month on just interest. So i would keep some o the money in the bank while I would use the other part o it to pay or some o y expenses. The first thing I would do is to put a lot o it in my college fund so that my parents wont have to work for my education. I would also use my spending money to buy myself a nice car. My car now is nice but it is a little low tech. My lie would change drastically because now I don’t have to worry about my college being payed for and my retirement is set. I will be able to take a more relaxed approach at life knowing my future will be financially stable. Buying lottery tickets is a poor investment because the odds of you winning are less than the odds that a polar bear attacks you in a beach in California. People should be more careful with their money and spend it responsibly.

What to do if I won the lottery? After last nights jackpot of five hundred million alot would be going on in my life. My first priority would be my parents and getting them out of any debts they owe at the time. Any car payments, or house bills that they owe would be payed for first. Next would be a couple of donations to close family who have helped me out my entire life. They would get a generous amount to help get them on their feet and maybe pay off most of their expenses. If I came home with all five hundred million, I would save around two hundred million right away in the bank. Others will be given to family and I would invest my money to make even more money in the future. For myself I would put myself through college so I have no debts when I come out. Most people would just sit around and do nothing but I would be bored all the time. I would still go to school and get a normal job. I wouldnt have to stress about getting the best job in the world but something to keep my mind going all the time. For myself I would buy a decent sized home and a couple of cars for some sunday drives. I dont know anyone who plays the lottery regularly but when the prize winnings are high my dad takes his chances. When I get older im going to do the same thing. Im not going to play on a regular basis because its very expensive to play, but when the lotto hits a big hefty number I will definitely play.

What i would do is i would pay the house bills.I would buy everything my mom and dad and siblings need.I would save money for my sister so she can go to college.I would give like 5,000 dollars to homeless communities.I think that if i do this maybe i would be more liked and make more friends by more people.It also shows me that i can make a difference in this world.

If I won the lottery, I would probably move. It’s dangerous to have that much money in a populated city, so maybe I would move to a suburban area. I would then pay off the house, pay off my student tuition, and then save the money. I would save at least 250 million of the 500 million. and spend about 25 million dollars. My life would be easier, but I would also be paranoid about losing money. My mom often plays the lottery and although I won’t play the lottery very often, I think it can be fun to imagine what you would do with the money.

I would will donate some of my money to the needy to help their lives better . Also i will pay off all my mothers & stepfather loans that they have . I will buy my sister anything she want. I will also pay for my college tuition for myself to be successful . I want to buy myself 5 cars and a beautiful mansion that i want built in the middle of Philadelphia. Im buying myself 25 Lou Vuitton & a bunch of Mac lipstick . I just want to live life like I always dreamed of I won the lottery!

I would will donate some of my money to the needy to help their lives better . Also I will pay off all my mothers & stepfather loans that they have . I will buy my sister anything she want. I will also pay for my college tuition for myself to be successful. I want to buy myself 5 cars and a beautiful mansion that i want built in the middle of Philadelphia. I’m buying myself 25 Lou Vuitton & a bunch of Mac lipstick . I just want to live life like I always dreamed of I won the lottery!

If I had won the lottery, the first thing I would do is pay off my parents debts and bills. They have given me so much and they deserve the chance to be debt free. The second thing I would do is, as cliche as it sounds, give my siblings and my parents most of the money. Even though I do love money, I feel that it is better to share then to keep it to myself. Then, with the money I have to myself, I’ll put the money in an account and use it to a responsible use, for example, charity. People tend to spend their money on desires they want. But it is a great feeling to know you help others.

If I won the lottery I would use it to help my me and my family. I would help my mom with finding a good house where me ans my sister would have our own rooms. I would also help my mom with groceries and bills in the house. I would save half the money for college and then use the other half to help my mom with finding a house, bills, groceries, and anything else that we need. I know my life would change and it would change for the better not just for me, but for my family because we would have a good house and minimal house and college problems. While I do not know anyone who plays the lottery regularly, but when I get older I may just play the lottery a couple of times in hopes of maybe one day winning.

If i won a lottery of 500 million dollars, I would help my mom pay off any loans or bills she still have. I would help the family move my grandpa’s grave to Canada. I know my sister’s struggling with money in her life, so i would give some money to her. I would also like to donate 1/3 of it to charity. Buddha said if we doing something good, something good would return back to you. I know relatives at Vietnam right now we are struggling as well, i would love to help them up. I’ll probably keep 1/10 of the money, because I’m fortunately have a family, free education, food, clothes, so i wouldn’t need that amount of money. So i would end up donating it to third world countries, after i help my family out. Thats what i would do if i won 500 million dollars.

If I won the lottery I would build my family a a new house first. I would give my parents half of the money so they wouldn’t have to work anymore. Also I would save money for my siblings and I to go to college. I would continue to live my normal life just change a couple things for the better. Lastly I would give back to my middle school and high school.

If I won the lottery, this question has plagued my mine many of times. Should I follow the norms and say i would it use on my family? Should i be selfish and only use it on myself? Maybe I could give my friends false hope telling them I would share it with them. Or should it go to my college funds, winning the lottery is such a big hassle, it puts a giant weight on your shoulders. You constantly have people looming over you wondering what you will do with the money, never allowing you to contemplate what you really want to do with the money. Honestly if I ever won the lottery I would put money aside for my family and my college funds but I would also use it to make a change in the Philadelphia school system. As a high school student in the Philadelphia school district I see first hand the struggles they are having with money. We lose teachers constantly, classrooms are overcrowded, there is no money for new supplies for example textbooks, paper, etc. If something does not change and fast the quality and efficiency of education in Philadelphia will slowly plummet.

– If I won the lottery, I would first cry tears of joy because I don’t usually win stuff and because I can reward my parents for everything they have done for me. I would get it in small payments over a couple of years because that way, I would receive a larger amount in total. -I would save $250,000 so in case anything happens to me, my family will have money for funeral costs and money to pay off any of my debts. Then, I would buy my mom her house dream in a quiet, calm place. I would get my dad his dream car, and I would pay off all of my siblings college loans so my dad wouldn’t have to worry about it, and I would give my dad monthly checks so he doesn’t have to work another day in his life. I would buy myself a small island in Dubai and build my own law firm there so I can become a very successful lawyer. This would change my life dramatically because I wouldn’t have to worry about going to college, living in a dangerous neighborhood, my dad over working, etc. No one in my life plays the lottery. If I become a successful lawyer. -I may play the lottery because I have enough money for my necessities and for things I don’t need. I do agree with Irwin. If you are financially stable, why don’t you spend a couple of bucks to see if you win big money that can change your life for the better. It won’t hurt you.

If I won the lottery I would make sure I bought my mom and dad a house where ever they want and pay it off. I would also have someone that is able to take care of them since they spent their lives taking care of me and my sisters. I would buy both of my sisters a house also. I would buy myself a house also and travel. i would save most of it and donate some of it to charity and my church.

-If I won the lottery, I would buy the little things I could enjoy, such as electronics or other small, fun stuff. I would then take care of the people closest to me. I would donate 90% of the left over money to charity. -I would save 10% for myself in case of future financial hardship. -I think people I do not know or who regularly do not like me would try to get on my good side to get money. That would be very annoying and stressful. -I don’t know anyone who plays the lottery regularly. I may play the lottery from time to time in the future. I think Mr. Irwin has a point, but a type of gambling that has a higher chance of winning and is consequently more logical would be stocks in companies that one expects to prosper in the near future.

If i won the lottery, I would do a lot of things with the money. First I would buy a new house for my mom and family because they deserve that. I would probably save most of it for college, but i would use some of the money for necessities and some luxuries. My life would change dramatically, because my family and I would never have to worry about money again. My aunt plays the lottery regularly, but obviously never won. I will never play the lottery when I’m older because I think its a huge waste of money. I 100 percent agree with Mr. Irwin’s reasoning.

If I won the lottery of $500 million. i would give $10 million to charity or to homeless shelters. I at least $20 million back to my mother. I would save $300 million for another times. I don’t think my life would change because money is not a major part of life it would give me things I want a need but its not a big deal. Nobody in my family or that I know plays regularly , but they do play sometimes.

If I won the lottery I would likely save some of the money, invest some of the money, and keep a little bit of the money around for spending. I wound save most of the money, likle 80%, for when I’m older, keep 15% of it around for spending on clothes, food, and other items, and I would put the remaining 5% to various charities in hopes of benefiting mankind. i think that my life would change drastically. If I had that much money, I would be able to afford the newest technology, I wouldn’t have to worry as much about saving for college, and I would be able to eat at the fanciest restaurants. One of my cousins plays the lottery regularly. i do not think that I will play the lottery when I’m older. I think that Irwin’s reasoning is pretty solid, and that people should think of the lottery as a product and not an investment.

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If you won the lottery, what would you do with the money? Would you change your lifestyle, choose to live the same way as you always have or a mix of both? Use specific reasons and examples to support your answer.

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Essay on “If I Won the Prize in a Lottery” Complete Essay, Paragraph, Speech for Class 10, Class 12 and Graduation and other classes.

If I Won the Prize in a Lottery

Outline: One’s character is reflected in what one wants to do — my prize money would not remain with me for long — i would use one – third of it for my education — I would not forget my kith and kin — I would spend the remaining amount on charity.

Ever since the State Governments introduced their lotteries, the common man has had a chance, however remote, of winning the first prize and an excuse, however flimsy, for dreaming of becoming suddenly rich. What would ‘I do if I won the first prize, say, of ten lac rupees in the Maharashtra lottery? What a man would do in such a situation depends on his character, his attitude to life, his ambitions and aspirations. One’s character is reflected not only in what one does but in what one wants to do.

Like Charles Lamb, I believe that money kept in one’s pocket burns it. So don’t expect me to hoard my prize money or to make it multiply by depositing it in a bank or investing it profitably. It is bound to vanish in a few years. Besides, ten lacs aren’t really much in these days, is it? I have got a ready and clear – cut plan for disposing of that ‘fabulous’ amount—should it ever descend into my pockets from the blue.

In the first place, I would recall and act upon those wise proverbs, ‘Charity begins at home,’ and “Self – help is the best help” I would set apart three lacs of rupees for my education and improvement of mind. I have set my heart on being a doctor. Monetary difficulties would no longer thwart my desire. After obtaining a degree in medicine from a good Indian University, I would go abroad for further education. Generally, I do not set store by foreign degrees, but since a foreign degree continues to be regarded with awe and envy in India, why should I forgo it when I could afford it? Moreover, I would broaden my outlook and enrich my experience by observing different countries and cultures.

Not that I am utterly self – centered and indifferent to others. I would distribute three lacs of rupees among the members of my family, near relatives and intimate friends. Unless I shared my good fortune with my kith and kin, I would feel a sense of guilt which would prevent me from utilizing the opportunities for education.

The remaining four lacs of rupees I would spend on charity. I have my own conception of charity. I would not offer donations to educational or humanitarian institutions. After all, there are philanthropists who are generous enough to help such institutions usually on the condition that they be named after them. I would assist a few promising individuals – students, writers, artists or scientists who, handicapped by poverty, are struggling to achieve recognition in their chosen spheres. Once such individuals achieve success, praise and help are showered on them, but nobody cares; for them during the period of their trials and tribulations. If I had the means, I would help such people.

Thus, you see, I would have nothing left of my fortune after a few years. I do not like to live on a windfall. Having armed myself with a good education, I would for existence, earn my own living.

Difficult Words: Flimsy – thin, slight. fabulous – unbelievable. from the blue -unexpectedly. thwart – obstruct, frustrate. set store by – attach importance to. kith and kin – friends and relations. philanthropists – persons who help the needy. tribulations – difficulties, sorrows. windfall – fortune got by chance.

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Paragraph on If I Win A Lottery

Students are often asked to write a paragraph on If I Win A Lottery in their schools. And if you’re also looking for the same, we have created 100-word, 200-word, and 250-word paragraphs on the topic.

Let’s take a look…

Paragraph on If I Win A Lottery in 100 Words

If I win a lottery, I will be very happy. I will buy lots of toys and chocolates. Also, I will give some money to my school to make a playground. I will give some money to poor people too. They can buy food and clothes. I will take my family on a trip to Disneyland. We will have a lot of fun there. I will also save some money for when I grow up. Winning a lottery will make many dreams come true. But, I will also remember to be kind and share with others.

Paragraph on If I Win A Lottery in 200 Words

If I win a lottery, it would be a dream come true. First, I would be shocked and jump up and down with joy. Then, I would share the good news with my family and friends. I would keep a part of the money for myself to buy a bicycle and lots of toys. With some money, I would get my parents their favorite things. Maybe a new car for my dad and a beautiful necklace for my mom. I would also use the money to help people who are not as lucky as we are. We could buy warm clothes for people who feel cold in the winter, or we could give food to those who are hungry. I would also use some money to make my school better. We could get new books for the library or new swings for the playground. Winning the lottery would be like getting a magic wand. But even without winning a lottery, we can still share what we have and make others happy. Because every time we share, we win the biggest prize – a happy heart.

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  • Essay on If I Win A Lottery

Paragraph on If I Win A Lottery in 250 Words

Winning a lottery can completely change one’s life, bringing joy, excitement, and a whole new world of opportunities. If I were lucky enough to win a lottery, I would be filled with delight. My initial reaction would be a mix of surprise and joy as I imagine all the ways I could use this windfall. The first thing I would do is secure a part of the money for my future. I would put enough into a savings account to cover my education and other important expenses. Next, I would like to give a portion of the winnings to charity. I believe that sharing luck with those in need can bring real happiness. I would also help my parents pay off any debts and make their lives more comfortable. I would then use some of the money to travel and see the world. I’ve always dreamed of visiting different countries and experiencing diverse cultures. Lastly, I would spend some money on things I love, like buying books, gadgets, or even a small pet. In the end, winning the lottery would not just bring financial stability, but also provide a chance to fulfill my dreams and help others. Remember, money can’t buy happiness, but it can certainly provide opportunities to find it. So, if I ever win a lottery, I would make sure to use it wisely and responsibly.

That’s it! I hope the paragraphs have helped you.

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Interviews and assessment centres

'what would you do if you won the lottery' tricky graduate interview question.

Abigail Lewis

21 Jun 2023, 15:41

Have you ever thought about what you will do if you win the lottery? Your interviewers want to know because it will help them to see that you are the right person for the job.

A pink piggybank looking perplexed and surrounded by coins

For many graduates, answering an interview question about winning the lottery can be tricky because it appears to be a trap: why are the interviewers asking what you’d do if you won big money? Are they trying to get you to admit that you would quit your job to travel around the world? That the only reason you’re applying for the job is that you need the money?

In truth, this question is not intended to trip you up. Instead, it aims to help the recruiter find out more about who you are as a person. And the secret to answering the question successfully is to use it to shine a light on all that’s interesting about you and to demonstrate that you would fit in well at the employer.

Tell me more. Why does an interviewer ask me what I’ll do if I win the lottery?

As mentioned above, this question is designed to give the interviewers a sense of your character – what inspires and motivates you, what is important to you and what your aspirations are. Essentially, it is asking what you would do, and to a certain extent who you’d be, if you were free from financial constraints.

It is in part a values-based interview question , which aims to explore whether you share the same values as the employer and whether you’d act in accordance with those values in the workplace. Your choice of what you'd do with a lottery win shows your life’s priorities. As such, it will give interviewers an insight into whether you would be a good cultural fit for the organisation and for the team.

The interview question ‘What would you do if you won the lottery?’ could also be asked in a strength-based interview . What you do with your winnings may also reflect the pursuits you simply enjoy doing, and strengths interview questions aim to find out what you are good at and what you like to do.

Note that this question isn’t asking you ‘What motivates you?’ or ‘How ambitious are you?’ , although you may end up revealing these things while saying what you’d do with a lottery win.

How to answer the interview question ‘What would you do if you won the lottery?’

DO choose a topic that is true to yourself, that you are sufficiently knowledgeable about to talk about confidently, and that you care enough about to want to discuss. It should be an idea you feel able to play with and expand upon in different directions. And DO try to pick a topic that chimes with what is important to the employer: for example, its values, its mission statement or main area of business, any corporate social responsibility projects or qualities it looks for in new recruits. Your employer research will help you here.

For example, if the company’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) projects involve animal welfare or community projects (and your values align) you could say something along the lines of: ‘I would use some of the money to support a city farm, donate to an animal charity or help create a feline equivalent to the dog show Crufts.’ Then expand your answer to bring the subject back to you and your abilities. You could, for instance, say that, although you like cats (for instance), you wouldn’t want to be one as you’re more of a pack animal and work well in teams (if that’s true).

Of course, you don’t have to say you’d contribute to a charitable cause. It’s a job interview, not a competition to see who can be most virtuous. Whatever you choose, however, try to show how well matched you and the employer are. For example, if the recruiter is looking for employees with a sense of adventure, it would be good to ensure your answer reflects a sense of adventure in you.

DON’T choose a topic you know little about. For example, don’t talk about using the money to travel to countries of which you know little and have little to say. For the same reason, DON’T make your ambitions so far-fetched you can’t feasibly talk about them in some detail or which may make you seem impractical.

Should you demonstrate your kindness and say you will buy a big house for your friends/parents/guardians and take them on a once-in-a-lifetime holiday? By all means but do also move on to spending your winnings on a project with wider values. Imagine that you can buy your aunt an end-of-terrace dwelling, fund your paraglide from the summit of a Hawaiian volcano and still have the cash to make the world a better place.

Example answers to the interview question ‘What would you do if you won the lottery?’

You’ll have read enough by now to know that your answer has to be personal and genuine – you can’t rely on template answers. But the following should give you inspiration, depending on the job, employer and industry.

Example answer 1

‘Ever since school, I’ve volunteered at animal shelters – at a donkey sanctuary in my hometown and with the RSPCA at university. I’d definitely start my own rescue centre, probably initially for donkeys and then expand. I’d also form partnerships with other sanctuaries worldwide and I’d blog on what’s required to care for them.’

Example answer 2

‘My family’s been affected by cancer and types of cancer most consistently under-funded are said to be bladder and lung. So, if I won the lottery, I’d fund research into those areas. I’d take advice on whether the money would be best used by me funding an annual research grant, setting up my own charity or giving to existing charities.’

Example answer 3

‘Having a secure place to live is essential for overall well-being, so first I’d ensure that my parents’ mortgage was paid off and then I’d buy myself a house. I’d make sure a trust fund was set up so that my baby niece had the prospect of a good deposit in the future. Then I’d work with Shelter to see how my financial resources could bolster their campaigns.'

Example answer 4

‘Before I started work, I’d go on a world tour – but not just any tour. I’d budget for and organise a global trip looking at the great, transport-based engineering achievements in history: the Suez Canal in Egypt, the world’s longest road bridge in Turkey, and the launch pad of Cape Canaveral from where the moon rockets launched. All of these would be on my itinerary. I want to see things that inspire me and make me feel humanity progresses.’

How not to reply to the interview question ‘What would you do if you won the lottery?’

While you should answer honestly, it’s best to avoid the following answers:

’I’d stop job hunting (or take early retirement) and I’d live off the interest from the capital, paragliding from my private beach house in Barbados.'

‘I’d set up my own business in [insert the industry to which you are applying].’

Why are these answers unlikely to get you the graduate job you want?

In general, try not to undermine your position by saying anything that suggests that you don’t passionately want the job that you are currently applying for. Use the opportunity to suggest what you would do in addition to working.

Similarly, you may want to demonstrate your commitment to your profession – but not by setting up a competitor organisation. Similarly, you wouldn’t want to set up a business in an area that – while not exactly the one you’re being interviewed for - is so closely related that it leaves the interviewer picturing you in another profession and questioning how much you want their opportunity.

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Interesting Literature

A Summary and Analysis of Shirley Jackson’s ‘The Lottery’

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

‘The Lottery’ is the best-known story of the American writer Shirley Jackson. Published in the New Yorker in 1948 and collected in The Lottery and Other Stories , the story is about a village where an annual lottery is drawn. However, the fate of the person who draws the ‘winning’ slip is only revealed at the end of the story in a dark twist.

‘The Lottery’ forces us to address some unpleasant aspects of human nature, such as people’s obedience to authority and tradition and their willingness to carry out evil acts in the name of superstition.

You can read ‘The Lottery’ here before proceeding to our summary and analysis of Jackson’s story below. You might also be interested in the following articles we have written on other aspects of the story:

‘The Lottery’: key quotes explained

‘The Lottery’: key themes discussed

‘The Lottery’: main symbols

But for the present, let’s start with a brief summary of the plot of the story.

‘The Lottery’: plot summary

The story takes place one morning between ten o’clock and noon on 27 June, in a village somewhere in (presumably) the USA. The year is not stated. The three hundred villagers are gathering to undertake the annual ritual of the lottery, which is always drawn on this date every year. Some of the children of the village are busy making a pile of stones which they closely guard in the corner of the village square.

The lottery is led by a Mr Summers, who has an old black box. Inside the black box, slips of paper have been inserted, all of them blank apart from one. The head of each household, when called up to the box by Mr Summers, has to remove one slip of paper.

When every household has drawn a slip of paper, the drawn slips are opened. It is discovered that Bill Hutchinson has drawn the marked slip of paper, and it is explained that, next, one person from within his family must be chosen. His family comprises five people: himself, his wife Tessie, and their three children, Bill Jr., Nancy, and Dave.

Bill’s wife, Tessie, isn’t happy that her family has been chosen, and calls for the lottery to be redrawn, claiming that her husband wasn’t given enough time to choose his slip of paper. But the lottery continues: now, each of the five members of the Hutchinson household must draw one slip from the black box. One slip will be marked while the others are not.

Each of the Hutchinsons draw out a slip of paper, starting with the youngest of the children. When they have all drawn a slip, they are instructed to open the folded pieces of paper they have drawn. All of them are blank except for Tessie’s, which has a black mark on it which Mr Summers had made with his pencil the night before.

Now, the significance of the pile of stones the children had been making at the beginning of the story becomes clear. Each of the villagers picks up a stone and they advance on Tessie, keen to get the business over with. One of the villagers throws a stone at Tessie’s head. She protests that this isn’t right and isn’t fair, but the villagers proceed to hurl their stones, presumably stoning her to death.

‘The Lottery’: analysis

‘The Lottery’ is set on 27 June, and was published in the 26 June issue of the New Yorker in 1948. Perhaps surprisingly given its status as one of the canonical stories of the twentieth century, the story was initially met with anger and even a fair amount of hate mail from readers, with many cancelling their subscriptions. What was it within the story that touched a collective nerve?

if i won the lottery i would essay

We may scoff at the Carthaginians sacrificing their children to the gods or the Aztecs doing similar, but Jackson’s point is that every age and every culture has its own illogical and even harmful traditions, which are obeyed in the name of ‘tradition’ and in the superstitious belief that they have a beneficial effect.

To give up the lottery would, in the words of Old Man Warner, be the behaviour of ‘crazy fools’, because he is convinced that the lottery is not only beneficial but essential to the success of the village’s crops. People will die if the lottery is not drawn, because the crops will fail and people will starve as a result. It’s much better to people like Old Man Warner that one person be chosen at random (so the process is ‘fair’) and sacrificed for the collective health of the community.

There are obviously many parallels with other stories here, as well as various ethical thought experiments in moral philosophy. The trolley problem is one. A few years after Jackson’s ‘The Lottery’ was published, Ray Bradbury wrote a story, ‘ The Flying Machine ’, in which a Chinese emperor decides it is better that one man be killed (in order to keep the secret of the flying machine concealed from China’s enemies) than that the man be spared and his invention fall into the wrong hands and a million people be killed in an enemy invasion.

But what makes the lottery in Jackson’s story even more problematic is that there is no evidence that the stoning of one villager does affects the performance of the village crops. Such magical thinking obviously belongs to religious superstition and a belief in an intervening God who demands a sacrifice in recognition of his greatness before he will allow the crops to flourish and people to thrive.

Indeed, in the realms of American literature, such superstition is likely to put us in mind of a writer from the previous century, Nathaniel Hawthorne, whose tales (see ‘ The Minister’s Black Veil ’ for one notable example) often tap into collective superstitions and beliefs among small religious communities in America’s Puritan past.

But even more than Hawthorne, we might compare Jackson’s ‘The Lottery’ with a couple of other twentieth-century stories. The first is another ‘lottery’ story and perhaps the most notable precursor to Jackson’s: Jorge Luis Borges’ 1941 story ‘ The Lottery in Babylon ’, which describes a lottery which began centuries ago and has been going on ever since. Although this lottery initially began as a way of giving away prizes, it eventually developed so that fines would be given out as well as rewards.

In time, participation in the lottery became not optional but compulsory. The extremes between nice prizes and nasty surprises, as it were, became more pronounced: at one end, a lucky winner might be promoted to a high office in Babylon, while at the other end, they might be killed.

Borges’ story is widely regarded as an allegory for totalitarianism, and it’s worth bearing in mind that it was published during the Second World War. Jackson’s lottery story, of course, was published just three years after the end of the war, when news about the full horrors of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust were only beginning to emerge in full.

Hannah Arendt, whose The Origins of Totalitarianism was published three years after ‘The Lottery’, would later coin the phrase ‘ banality of evil ’ to describe figures like Adolf Eichmann who had presided over the Nazi regime. Such men were not inherently evil, but were aimless and thoroughly ordinary individuals who drifted towards tyranny because they sought power and direction in their lives.

What is Jackson’s story if not the tale of decent and ordinary people collectively taking part in a horrific act, the scapegoating of an individual? Jackson’s greatest masterstroke in ‘The Lottery’ is the sketching in of the everyday details, as though we’re eavesdropping on the inhabitants of a Brueghel painting, so that the villagers strike us as both down-to-earth, ordinary people and yet, at the same time, people we believe would be capable of murder simply because they didn’t view it as such.

These are people who clearly know each other well, families whose children have grown up together, yet they are prepared to turn on one of their neighbours simply because the lottery decrees it. And the villagers may breathe a collective sigh of relief when little Dave, the youngest of the Hutchinson children, reveals his slip of paper to be blank, but Jackson leaves us in no doubt that they would have stoned him if he had been the unlucky victim.

And the other story with which a comparative analysis of ‘The Lottery’ might be undertaken is another tale about the idea of the scapegoat : Ursula K. Le Guin’s 1973 story, ‘ The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas ’. In Le Guin’s story, the inhabitants of a fictional city, Omelas, enjoy happy and prosperous lives, but only because a child is kept in a state of perpetual suffering somewhere in the city. This miserable child is imprisoned and barely kept alive: the price the inhabitants of Omelas willingly pay for their own bliss.

Or is it? One of the intriguing details of Le Guin’s story is whether we are truly in a magical realm where this one child’s suffering makes everyone else’s joy possible, or whether this is merely – as in Jackson’s ‘The Lottery’ – what the townspeople tell themselves .

Just as men like Old Warner cannot even countenance the idea of abandoning the lottery (imagine if the crops failed!), the people of Omelas cannot even entertain the notion that their belief in their scapegoat may be founded on baseless superstition. They’re making the child suffer, in other words, for nothing, just as Tessie Hutchinson is sacrificed for nothing: the crops will fail or flourish regardless. There are no winners in Jackson’s lottery: just three hundred losers.

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English Essay, Paragraph, Speech on “If I Won a Lottery Prize” for Kids, Students of Class 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 12 Board Examination

If i won a lottery prize.

I want to earn money through hard work when I grow up. However, I know how I would use the money if I won a lottery prize, say, of seventy-five lakh rupees.

First, I would give my friends and relatives a tea party. The menu would consist of the choicest sweets. Second, I would buy the best of clothes for my parents, brothers, sisters and myself. Third, I would buy a scooter, for it takes me a lot of time to travel on a cycle. Fourth, I would set up a small library of my own. This would consist of the most interesting books for children. The boys and girls of my locality would be free to borrow these books and read them. All this would cost me about five lakh rupees.

I would deposit five lakh rupees in a post office under some useful saving scheme. This would yield me the necessary funds for my higher education. Sixth, I would give the remaining sixty-five lakh rupees to my parents so that they may build a house. At present, they do not have enough money to build one. We have been living in rented houses all our lives. Some landlords have been very good while others have been painfully bad. So we feel that there is nothing like having one’s own house. 

Well, all these plans depend upon my winning a lottery prize!

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What I Would Do If I Won A Lottery

Lotteries are matters of mere chances. One does not have to show any skill or intelligence for it. The only thing necessary is to buy lottery tickets. If by the grace of God I win a lottery. I will be full of joy. Some people who buy many lottery tickets may not win any. On the other hand, a blind man buying only one ticket may win the first prize. I wish to try my luck, so I have bought a lottery ticket. I have bought a lottery ticket. I have done it to try my luck. If I win the lottery I shall spend it most judiciously according to the advice of my parents. I shall feel on top of the world and would experience a never- before felt joy.

Pretty much almost all of us have speculated what we’ll do if we win the lottery, and it’s also a classic topic for our early school life essays. All of my dreams and aspirations could be achieved if I won the lottery. At first, I shall give the entire amount to my father. As we are almost landless people, I would request my father to buy some land where he can grow paddy, jute, sugarcane, oilseeds, etc. We shall spend an amount for this purpose. With my parents and other members of the family, I shall first proceed to the temple and make generous offerings as an act of gratitude. If I get this large amount, my parents will be very happy.

Then I shall request my mother to make a list of the most essential things for our family. I like to spend some money on this connection. I shall spend freely for the comforts of my parents. I would settle all debts and make sure they have enough money to live the rest of their lives in ease. Then we shall buy good and tasteful clothes for the members of our family. I shall decorate my parents by giving them shoes, screens, lungi, shirts. I shall buy new school uniforms for myself and my sister. I shall request my teachers to suggest me some useful and essential books which will serve the purpose of reference books in the future. Then I shall donate some amount to my school for the education of poor students. I shall also give some money to society for blind children. The old adage money can’t buy happiness doesn’t seem to apply in our times where there’s a price on everything.

All of my dreams and aspirations could be achieved if I won the lottery. We shall repair our old dwelling house and purchase some furniture and utensils for the house. I shall also donate some money to the local mosque and orphanage. I shall open an account in a bank and keep the rest of the money there.  I will deposit the balance money in the bank. The interest in this will be sufficient for me to lead a comfortable life. I shall be really happy if I win the first prize. The money will remain safe in the bank and annual interest will be added to it. All of my dream and aspirations could be achieved if I won a lottery. Thus, I will spend the lottery money.

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Essay For Students | [Best] Essay writing in English language.

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If I win a Lottery essay in English.

Hello friends, If I won a lottery in this imaginary essay I have told what I will do if I win lottery money. So let's start with the essay.

If I win a lottery

If I win a Lottery.

One of my friend had purchased a very costly mobile phone he showed me that phone I liked that phone very much. I also want to buy the same mobile phone but it was so costly that I couldn't afford it.

The next day I came to the bus stand for going to school and was waiting for a bus at that time I saw a lottery shop nearby where many people were buying those lottery tickets. On the shop, there was a big advertisement board for one core lottery.

When I saw that advertisement board a thought came to my mind that what if I won a lottery!. With that one core rupees, I can do whatever I want, I can complete all of my wishes and I can buy a more costly phone than my friend.

I was very excited about the lottery ticket even though I hadn't purchased the lottery ticket. I was just thinking of winning of lottery by watching the advertisement. Then I thought If I won a lottery then I can full fill of my wishes but, the lottery is one type of gambling isn't it? and is it ok to be dependent on the lottery money?.

We think that lottery is a game of luck, but actually, the lottery is a type of gambling because for wining one lottery so many people spend their money and only one of them wins the lottery money others lose their money. And if one gets the lottery then the person gets addicted to it and spends his money again and again to win the lottery which he doesn't win.

When these thoughts came to my mind I understood that the lottery is a game of gambling, not luck. I decided instead of thinking about what I will do I win a lottery! I will study and work hard to complete all of my dreams. And then I firmly decided I don't need this lottery and dropped the thought of what if I won a lottery.

Friends, what will you do if you got a lottery and what do you think about the lottery tickets? do tell us by commenting below.

This essay on if I won a lottery can be used by students of class 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th for their educational purpose. This essay can also be used on the topics given below.

  • If I won lottery money.
  • What if I win the lottery.

Friends did you liked this imaginary essay on If I win the lottery and if you want an essay on any topic in English the let us know by commenting below.

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Post a comment, 14 comments.

if i won the lottery i would essay

This essay is very nice

if i won the lottery i would essay

Thank you very much, we are happy that you liked this essay :)

amazing essay

Thank you very much we are happy that you liked this essay :)

Thank you very much we are happy that you liked the essay.

I found a mistake on first line of first paragraph you write "One of my friends" we are talkiing about only for one person it will be come "friend" thank you and it is very nice essay.

Good observation and your grammar is quite good, I will correct the mistake. Thankyou.

the idea and the creativity was wonderful

Thank you :)

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Winning Powerball numbers for May 1, 2024. Anyone win last night's drawing jackpot?

The  Powerball  lottery jackpot continues to grow after no one matched all six numbers from Monday night's drawing .

Grab your tickets  and let's  check your numbers  to see if you're the game's newest millionaire.

Here are the numbers for the Wednesday, May 1, Powerball jackpot worth an estimated $178 million with a cash option of $81.3 million.

Powerball, Mega Millions: Want to win the lottery? Here are luckiest numbers, places to play

Powerball numbers 5/1/24

The winning numbers for Wednesday night's drawing were 1, 11, 19, 21, 68, and the Powerball is 15. The Power Play was 2X.

Did anyone win Powerball last night, Wednesday, May 1st, 2024?

Results are pending.

Powerball winner? Lock up your ticket and go hide. What to know if you win the jackpot

How many Powerball numbers do you need to win a prize?

You only need to match one number in Powerball to win a prize. However, that number must be the Powerball worth $4. Visit powerball.com for the entire prize chart.

What is the Powerball payout on matching 2 lottery numbers?

Matching two numbers won't win anything in Powerball unless one of the numbers is the Powerball. A ticket matching one of the five numbers and the Powerball is also worth $4. Visit powerball.com for the entire prize chart.

Powerball numbers you need to know: These most commonly drawn numbers could help you win

How much is the Powerball drawing jackpot?

The Powerball jackpot for Wednesday, May 1, 2024, rose to an estimated $178 million with a cash option of $81.3 million, according to  powerball.com .

When is the next Powerball drawing?

Drawings are held three times per week at approximately 10:59 p.m. ET every Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.

How much is a Powerball lottery ticket?

A single Powerball ticket costs $2. Pay an additional $1 to add the Power Play for a chance to multiply all Powerball winnings except for the jackpot. Players can also add the Double Play for one more $1 to have a second chance at winning $10 million.

How to play Powerball

Mega Millions numbers: Anyone win Tuesday night's drawing jackpot?

Mega Millions winning numbers

The Mega Millions  continued to rise after nobody matched all six numbers from Tuesday night's drawing . Tuesday night's  winning numbers  were 10, 18, 27, 37, 61, and the Mega Ball was 5. The Megaplier was 3X.

How much is the Mega Millions drawing jackpot?

The  current Mega Millions jackpot  is worth an estimated $284 million, with a cash option of $127.6 million.

Powerball 2024 drawing jackpot winners

Here is the list of 2024 Powerball jackpot wins, according to  powerball.com :

  • $842.4 million — Jan. 1; Michigan .
  • $1.362 million — April 6; Oregon .

Powerball Top 10 lottery drawing jackpot results

Here are the all-time top 10 Powerball jackpots, according to  powerball.com :

  • $2.04 billion — Nov. 7, 2022; California.
  • $1.765 billion — Oct. 11, 2023; California.
  • $1.586 billion — Jan. 13, 2016; California, Florida, Tennessee.
  • $1.326 billion — April 6, 2024; Oregon.
  • $1.08 billion — July 19, 2023; California.
  • $842 million — Jan. 1, 2024; Michigan.
  • $768.4 million — March 27, 2019; Wisconsin.
  • $758.7 million — Aug. 23, 2017; Massachusetts.
  • $754.6 million — Feb. 6, 2023; Washington.
  • $731.1 million — Jan. 20, 2021; Maryland.

Powerball numbers: Anyone win Monday night's drawing jackpot?

Powerball, Mega Millions history: Top 10 U.S. lottery drawing jackpot results

Here are the nation's all-time top 10 Powerball and Mega Millions jackpots, according to  powerball.com :

  • $2.04 billion,  Powerball  — Nov. 7, 2022; California.
  • $1.765 billion, Powerball — Oct. 11, 2023; California.
  • $1.586 billion,  Powerball  — Jan. 13, 2016; California, Florida, Tennessee.
  • $1.58 million, Mega Millions  — Aug. 8, 2023; Florida.
  • $1.537 billion,  Mega Millions  — Oct. 23, 2018; South Carolina.
  • $1.35 billion, Mega Millions — Jan. 13, 2023; Maine.
  • $1.337 billion,  Mega Millions  — July 29, 2022; Illinois.
  • $1.326 billion, Powerball — April 6, 2024; Oregon
  • $1.13 billion, Mega Millions — March 26, 2024; New Jersey.
  • $1.08 billion, Powerball — July 19, 2023; California.

Chris Sims is a digital content producer at Midwest Connect Gannett. Follow him on Twitter:  @ChrisFSims .

A massive Powerball win draws attention to a little-known immigrant culture in the US

PORTLAND, Ore. — Cheng “Charlie” Saephan wore a broad smile and a bright blue sash emblazoned with the words “Iu-Mien USA” as he hoisted an oversized check for $1.3 billion above his head.

The 46-year-old immigrant’s luck in winning an enormous Powerball jackpot in Oregon earlier this month — a lump sum payment of $422 million after taxes, which he and his wife will split with a friend — has changed his life. It also raised awareness about Iu Mien people, a southeast Asian ethnic group with origins in China, many of whose members fled from Laos to Thailand and then settled in the U.S. following the Vietnam War.

if i won the lottery i would essay

Powerball winning numbers for May 1 with $178 million jackpot at stake

if i won the lottery i would essay

New month, bigger jackpot.

The first Powerball drawing of May had an estimated value of $178 million after there were no winners in Monday night's drawing.

If someone wins the Powerball jackpot on Wednesday and chooses to walk away with the cash-value option, they'll take home more than $81 million, according to the lottery's estimates.

The winning numbers were scheduled to be drawn just after 11 p.m. ET Wednesday and we'll have the results below.

Powerball jackpot winners: $1.3 billion Powerball winners revealed, cancer survivor said he 'prayed to God' for win

Powerball winning numbers for 5/1/2024

The winning numbers for Wednesday night's Powerball were 1, 21, 19, 11 and 68 with a Powerball of 15 . The Power Play was 2X.

Winning lottery numbers are sponsored by  Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY network . 

Did anyone win Powerball?

Keep your tickets handy and be sure to check back here on Thursday morning, we'll update first thing with any information on winners.

To find the full list of previous Powerball winners, click the link to the  lottery's website .

How to play Powerball

In order to purchase a $2 Powerball ticket, you'll have to visit your local convenience store, gas station or grocery store − and in a handful of states, you can purchase tickets online.

To play, you will need to pick six numbers in total to mark on your ticket. Five numbers will be white balls ranging from numbers 1 to 69. The Powerball is red and one number which is between 1 and 26.

If you want to increase your chances of winning, you can add a “Power Play” for $1 which increases the winnings for all non-jackpot prizes. This addition can multiply winnings by  2X ,  3X ,  4X ,  5X , or  10X .

Players can also ask a cashier for a "Quick Pick" where a cashier will give you a computer generated numbers on a printed Powerball ticket.

Drawings are held on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday nights. If there's no jackpot winner, the cash prize will increase by millions.

Where to purchase lottery tickets

Tickets can be purchased in person at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.

You can also order tickets online through  Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network , in these U.S. states and territories: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Texas, Washington D.C. and West Virginia. The Jackpocket app allows you to pick your lottery game and numbers, place your order, see your ticket and collect your winnings all using your phone or home computer.

Jackpocket is the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network. Gannett may earn revenue for audience referrals to Jackpocket services. Must be 18+, 21+ in AZ and 19+ in NE. Not affiliated with any State Lottery. Gambling Problem? Call 1-877-8-HOPE-NY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY);  1-800-327-5050 (MA); 1-877-MYLIMIT (OR);  1-800-981-0023  (PR);  1-800-GAMBLER  (all others). Visit jackpocket.com/tos for full terms.

Acting as if they won the draft lottery, Sparks say ‘we’re going to shock a lot of people’

Cameron Brink poses for a photo after being drafted by the Sparks during the 2024 WNBA draft.

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In a suite in the arena they’ll soon call home, the Sparks’ three draft picks mingled with the Showtime Lakers. Cameron Brink, Rickea Jackson and McKenzie Forbes rubbed elbows with Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Michael Cooper. The former NBA stars who were being honored at halftime of a Lakers playoff game last week shared stories of their success in a city that demands nothing less.

It was, as Brink said, the “perfect welcome to L.A.” But it was just the start.

“We came in to help make a difference,” the No. 2 overall draft pick said, “to help this team win.”

The most anticipated Sparks draft picks of the last decade take center stage as the team begins a new era. The Sparks open their season on May 15 against the Atlanta Dream at 7 p.m. at Long Beach’s Walter Pyramid.

The franchise is mired in its longest playoff drought in history, a three-season dry spell that has spanned two head coaches. On Wednesday at the team’s preseason media day, coach Curt Miller shied away from putting a timetable on when the organization will return to prominence. He is entering his second season at the helm, but after losing veteran players including longtime franchise pillar Nneka Ogwumike , Miller said it feels as if the Sparks are back at square one.

Stanford's Cameron Brink, left, poses for a photo with WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert after being selected by the Sparks.

After Caitlin Clark is drafted No. 1, Sparks select Cameron Brink and Rickea Jackson

The Sparks get some needed help in the frontcourt Monday night when drafting Stanford center Cameron Brink and Tennessee forward Rickea Jackson.

April 15, 2024

The build is still very much in its early stages, but with potential stars at the forefront, the big plans remain intact.

“It does take a process,” Miller said, “and what a foundation we get to start working with with two lottery picks.”

Less than a week into training camp, Brink, the Sparks’ highest draft pick since Ogwumike went first overall in 2012, already has impressed coaches with her elite shot-blocking ability. Jackson, the No. 4 overall pick out of Tennessee, flashed her versatility and ability to play both forward positions. Third-round pick Forbes, one month after helping USC to its best season in nearly 30 years, is “beyond her years with basketball knowledge,” Miller said.

But everyone’s head is spinning, Miller emphasized. The team has 17 healthy players in training camp after waiving forward Virag Kiss on Tuesday, and 10 are new to the team. Establishing team chemistry is almost as important as picking up new concepts and terminology.

The rookies already are excelling at both. After Brink finished her news conference Wednesday, the Naismith defensive player of the year skipped away from the table into the arms of center Li Yueru, who wrapped the rookie up in a hug and lifted her off the ground. The 6-foot-4 former Stanford star has “a unique way of making people smile,” Miller said.

Tennessee's Rickea Jackson (right) hugs WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert after being drafted by the  Sparks.

While antagonism between rookies and veterans fighting for coveted roster spots has been a discussion on social media, veteran guard Lexie Brown denied any bad blood in the league. The 29-year-old recalled her “horrible” rookie experience with the Connecticut Sun in 2018 and vowed to never make a young player feel the way she did.

“We’re so excited to have Cam and Rickea here and Kenzie,” Brown said. “They’ve been incredible. We want to make them feel as welcomed as possible.”

Brink expressed gratitude for forward Dearica Hamby’s advice and said the former two-time WNBA sixth player of the year has been “very much like a mother to me.” Jackson said former UCLA star Monique Billings, who joined the Sparks this offseason as a free agent from the Atlanta Dream, has been the veteran who has most taken her under their wing, along with Hamby and guard Layshia Clarendon.

“It’s really just helping them stay grounded in who they are,” said Clarendon, who is entering her 12th year as a pro, “teaching them to be the players that they want to be on the court and not getting caught in the noise.”

FILE - Los Angeles Sparks' Candace Parker, right, blocks a shot by New York Liberty's Epiphanny Prince during the second half of a WNBA basketball game, Aug. 4, 2017, in Los Angeles. While the fight for gender equity continues around the sports world, 26 years after it was launched the WNBA is one of the longest running professional women's sports league. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

Former Sparks star Candace Parker announces her retirement

Three-time WNBA champion and two-time Olympic gold medalist Candace Parker announced Sunday she’s retiring after 16 seasons.

April 28, 2024

The league’s latest rookies enter under a massive spotlight. Last month’s draft, when former Iowa star Caitlin Clark went first overall to the Indiana Fever, was the most-watched WNBA draft, reaching 2.45 million viewers.

Interest in the league is spiking as several teams have announced season ticket sellouts or have moved certain games to larger venues to accommodate ticket demand. The Sparks, who are unable to start the season at Crypto.com Arena during the final stages of renovation, will play their first five home games at the Pyramid, including a game against the Fever on May 24 that is sold out.

Without a superstar for the first time in franchise history, the Sparks are in need of a jolt. They finished 17-23, ninth in the WNBA. Turning the roster over again could make some overlook the young group, Brown said, but those in the gym are looking forward to the youth movement.

“I think,” Hamby said, “we’re going to shock a lot of people.”

More to Read

Southern California guard JuJu Watkins (12) reacts after having her shot blocked by Stanford forward Cameron Brink (22) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in the championship of the Pac-12 tournament Sunday, March 10, 2024, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Ian Maule)

Sparks ready to restock team with No. 2 and No. 4 picks in WNBA draft

April 13, 2024

Los Angeles Sparks forward Nneka Ogwumike dribbles during the second half of a WNBA basketball game.

Nneka Ogwumike tells Sparks she is leaving. What’s left for the team?

Jan. 24, 2024

TCU head coach Raegan Pebley gestures during a game against Oklahoma on Jan. 31, 2023.

Sparks, new GM Raegan Pebley face critical offseason with No. 2 draft pick

Jan. 9, 2024

if i won the lottery i would essay

Thuc Nhi Nguyen covers college sports and the NBA for the Los Angeles Times. She previously covered UCLA, professional soccer and preps for the Southern California News Group. Because she doesn’t use her University of Washington mathematics degree for work, it makes great decoration in her parents’ Seattle home.

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Iowa's Caitlyn Clark, left, poses for a photo with WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert

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Guest Essay

The Fantasy of Reviving Nuclear Energy

A photo of two cooling towers at a decommissioned nuclear plant in California, surrounded by vineyards.

By Stephanie Cooke

Ms. Cooke is a former editor of Nuclear Intelligence Weekly and the author of “In Mortal Hands: A Cautionary History of the Nuclear Age.”

World leaders are not unaware of the nuclear industry’s long history of failing to deliver on its promises or of its weakening vital signs. Yet many continue to act as if a nuclear renaissance could be around the corner, even though nuclear energy’s share of global electricity generation has fallen by almost half from its high of roughly 17 percent in 1996.

In search of that revival, representatives from more than 30 countries gathered in Brussels in March at a nuclear summit hosted by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Belgian government. Thirty-four nations, including the United States and China, agreed “to work to fully unlock the potential of nuclear energy,” including extending the lifetimes of existing reactors, building nuclear power plants and deploying advanced reactors.

Yet even as they did so, there was an acknowledgment of the difficulty of their undertaking. “Nuclear technology can play an important role in the clean energy transition,” Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, told summit attendees. But she added that “the reality today, in most markets, is a reality of a slow but steady decline in market share” for nuclear power.

The numbers underscore that downturn. Solar and wind power together began outperforming nuclear power globally in 2021, and that trend continues as nuclear staggers along. Solar alone added more than 400 gigawatts of capacity worldwide last year, two-thirds more than the previous year. That’s more than the roughly 375 gigawatts of combined capacity of the world’s 415 nuclear reactors, which remained relatively unchanged last year. At the same time, investment in energy storage technology is rapidly accelerating. In 2023, BloombergNEF reported that investors for the first time put more money into stationary energy storage than they did into nuclear.

Still, the drumbeat for nuclear power has become pronounced. At the United Nations climate conference in Dubai in December, the Biden administration persuaded two dozen countries to pledge to triple their nuclear energy capacity by 2050. Those countries included allies of the United States with troubled nuclear programs, most notably France , Britain , Japan and South Korea , whose nuclear bureaucracies will be propped up by the declaration as well as the domestic nuclear industries they are trying to save.

“We are not making the argument to anybody that this is absolutely going to be a sweeping alternative to every other energy source,” John Kerry, the Biden administration climate envoy at the time, said. “But we know because the science and the reality of facts and evidence tell us that you can’t get to net zero 2050 without some nuclear.”

That view has gained traction with energy planners in Eastern Europe who see nuclear as a means of replacing coal, and several countries — including Canada, Sweden, Britain and France — are pushing to extend the operating lifetimes of existing nuclear plants or build additional ones. Some see smaller or more advanced reactors as a means of providing electricity in remote areas or as a means of decarbonizing sectors such as heat, industry and transportation.

So far, most of this remains in early stages, with only three nuclear reactors under construction in Western Europe, two in Britain and one in France, each more than a decade behind schedule. Of the approximately 54 other reactors under construction worldwide as of March, 23 are in China, seven are in India, and three are in Russia, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. The total is less than a quarter of the 234 reactors under construction in the peak year of 1979, although 48 of those were later suspended or abandoned.

Even if you agree with Mr. Kerry’s argument, and many energy experts do not, pledging to triple nuclear capacity by 2050 is a little like promising to win the lottery. For the United States, it would mean adding 200 gigawatts of nuclear operating capacity (almost double what the country has ever built) to the current 100 gigawatts or so, generated by more than 90 commercial reactors that have been running an average of 42 years. Globally it would mean tripling the existing capacity built over the past 70 years in less than half that time, in addition to replacing reactors that will shut down before 2050.

The Energy Department estimates the total cost of such an effort in the United States at roughly $700 billion. But David Schlissel , a director at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis , has calculated that the two new reactors at the Vogtle plant in Georgia — the only new reactors built in the United States in a generation — on average, cost $21.2 billion per gigawatt in today’s dollars. Using that figure as a yardstick, the cost of building 200 gigawatts of new capacity would be far higher: at least $4 trillion, or $6 trillion if you count the additional cost of replacing existing reactors as they age out.

For much less money and in less time, the world could reduce greenhouse gas emissions through the use of renewables like solar, wind, hydropower and geothermal power and by transmitting, storing and using electricity more efficiently. A recent analysis by the German Environment Agency examined multiple global climate scenarios in which Paris climate agreement targets are met, and it found that renewable energy “is the crucial and primary driver.”

The logic of this approach was attested to at the climate meeting in Dubai, where more than 120 countries signed a more realistic commitment to triple renewable energy capacity by 2030.

There’s a certain inevitability about the U.S. Energy Department’s latest push for more nuclear energy. An agency predecessor, the Atomic Energy Commission, brought us Atoms for Peace under President Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s in a bid to develop the peaceful side of the atom, hoping it would gain public acceptance of an expanding arsenal of nuclear weapons while supplying electricity too cheap to meter.

Fast-forward 70 years, and you hear a variation on the same theme. Most notably, Ernest Moniz, the energy secretary under President Barack Obama, argues that a vibrant commercial nuclear sector is necessary to sustain U.S. influence in nuclear weapons nonproliferation efforts and global strategic stability. As a policy driver, this argument might explain in part why the government continues to push nuclear power as a climate solution, despite its enormous cost and lengthy delivery time.

China and Russia are conspicuously absent from the list of signatories to the Dubai pledge to triple nuclear power, although China signed the declaration in Brussels. China’s nuclear program is growing faster than that of any other country, and Russia dominates the global export market for reactors with projects in countries new to commercial nuclear energy, such as Turkey, Egypt and Bangladesh, as well as Iran.

Pledges and declarations on a global stage allow world leaders a platform to be seen to be doing something to address climate change, even if, as is the case with nuclear, they lack the financing and infrastructure to succeed. But their support most likely means that substantial sums of money — much of it from taxpayers and ratepayers — will be wasted on perpetuating the fantasy that nuclear energy will make a difference in a meaningful time frame to slow global warming.

The U.S. government is already poised to spend billions of dollars building small modular and advanced reactors and keeping aging large ones running. But two such small reactor projects based on conventional technologies have already failed. Which raises the question: Will future projects based on far more complex technologies be more viable? Money for such projects — provided mainly under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act — could be redirected in ways that do more for the climate and do it faster, particularly if planned new nuclear projects fail to materialize.

There is already enough potential generation capacity in the United States seeking access to the grid to come close to achieving President Biden’s 2035 goal of a zero-carbon electricity sector, and 95 percent of it is solar, battery storage and wind. But these projects face a hugely constrained transmission system, regulatory and financial roadblocks and entrenched utility interests, enough to prevent many of them from ever providing electricity, according to a report released last year by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Even so, existing transmission capacity can be doubled by retrofitting transmission lines with advanced conductors, which would offer at least a partial way out of the gridlock for renewables, in addition to storage, localized distribution and improved management of supply and demand.

What’s missing are leaders willing to buck their own powerful nuclear bureaucracies and choose paths that are far cheaper, less dangerous and quicker to deploy. Without them, we are doomed to more promises and wasteful spending by nuclear proponents who have repeatedly shown that they can talk but can’t deliver.

Stephanie Cooke is a former editor of Nuclear Intelligence Weekly and the author of “In Mortal Hands: A Cautionary History of the Nuclear Age.”

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips . And here’s our email: [email protected] .

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