GERMAN PROTECTIONISM COSTS TIPP24 JOBS
3 April 2009
Major German online gambling company sheds
139 staffers
The disastrous consequences of Germany's exclusive
gambling policies under the German Interstate Gambling
Treaty were showcased this week in a press release from
the major German Internet lotto provider Tipp24 AG.
Hounded out of its own country, the firm has transferred
operations to the more enlightened environment of the
UK, shedding 139 out of 154 German jobs in the process.
When the second stage of the State Treaty on Gaming
came into force on 1 January, 2009, Tipp24 AG was forced
to drastically reduce its business activities and
discontinue its previous internet-based brokerage
business for participation in games operated by 'Deutscher
Lotto- und Totoblock' as a result of prohibitions
introduced by the new gaming legislation, the statement
reveals.
The Tipp24.com website has since been
operated by Tipp24 Services Ltd., based in London,
resulting in the loss of German jobs.
The
company statement reveals that just 15 employees will
remain in service at its headquarters in Hamburg due to
Germany's controversial Interstate Gambling Treaty,
which was enacted on January 1, 2008, and prohibits
Tipp24 from conducting any form of lottery brokerage
online in Germany in competition with German state
gambling monopolies. The affected employees will cease
working for Tipp24 AG by 31 March 2009 at the latest.
"We are forced to lay off the majority of our staff
as the new State Treaty on Gaming forbids us from any
form of lottery brokerage via the Internet in Germany,"
says Jens Schumann, Chairman of the Executive Board of
Tipp24 AG.
"The majority of these jobs will
probably be replaced by new ones abroad - where the
restrictions do not apply," he added. "At the same time
as the German state is spending billions to save German
jobs, it is also destroying the jobs of a healthy,
mid-size company with a law which contravenes EU
legislation.
"Moreover, Tipp24 AG transferred
around EUR 130 million in tax revenues to the federal
states last year alone. This money will now no longer be
available to the state."
Tripp24's statement goes
on to recap the background to the State Treaty on
Gaming. The legislation forbids the online marketing and
advertising of lotteries, allegedly to protect problem
gamblers. There have been no scientific studies to date,
however, which prove the government's claims of a
sociologically relevant 'lottery addiction'.
"It
seems more likely that the state treaty is designed to
eliminate private companies under the pretext of
preventing addiction," Schumann asserts. "After all,
controlling addiction would be much more effective via
the Internet than at the lottery kiosk. We will
therefore continue to take legal action against the new
state treaty."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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