ONLINE GAMBLING BLACKMAIL
10 April 2009
Irish minister threatens online gambling
companies with a ban
The Irish minister for sport, Martin Cullen, is unlikely
to be the most popular politician with Internet gambling
companies in the country following his threats to ban
internet betting in Ireland if bookmakers don't cough up
more money to the Exchequer to aid the controversial
Horse and Greyhound Racing Fund, reports the newspaper
Independent.ie.
Cullen wants to reduce government
contributions to the fund by just over Euro 1.5 million
for this year, despite widespread predictions that it
was facing a major cut in the face of the country's
worsening economic situation.
Addressing an
Oireachtas committee. Cullen said that government
financial support for the fund was coming to an end, and
he expected Irish online bookmakers and offshore
gamblers to pick up the bill for the horse racing
industry in the future.
"It is not sustainable to
continue to support this fund from the Exchequer,"
Cullen asserted. "The big players will need to come to
the plate. A view will need to be formed about Internet
and offshore betting. I will use whatever legal levers
are available to me to get at that funding in terms of
trying to get some tax out of it."
The Minister,
said that a levy of 0.5 percent on Internet gambling
would yield over Euro 100 million, adding: "The reality
is that most betting is now offshore. There are choices
to be made, and I am making it clear to the industry
that we will make those choices.
"The ultimate
choice would be to ban it [Internet gambling]. That
approach has been taken in America and perhaps it will
be taken in other countries as well. However, I do not
want to go down that road. I believe there is a means of
taking action."
Industry estimates suggest that
between Euro 1.5 billion and Euro 1.7 billion of Irish
money a year is wagered outside the country in telephone
and Internet betting, reports Independent.
Cullen believes that a tax on that should pay for Irish
horse and dog racing, yet only a small proportion of the
significant amounts wagered through the Internet and
telephone betting is actually gambled on Irish races.
Irish horse racing accounts for just 16 percent of
the turnover of Ireland's largest bookmaker, Paddy
Power. In contrast, betting on cross-channel racing
accounts for almost half the firm's business.
Ireland's decision to give all its betting tax receipts
to just two sports is in stark contrast to the regimes
in the UK and Australia. But obviously the government's
plan has the support of the horse racing and greyhound
industries in the country.
"I employ 100 people
and I can't get off the merry-go-round," said leading
trainer Jim Bolger. "Ten of my employees are people that
came back to me in the last six months that used to be
with me years ago. They went off working on the building
sites and such places and they had been made redundant."
However, if Cullen persists in his threats, it could
backfire. Internet bookmakers fear such government moves
will lead to severe job losses.
"Ours isn't an
Irish business, it's an international business," a Paddy
Power spokesman told Independent this weekend. "By the
end of this year, 80 percent of our Internet customers
will be from overseas. Therefore, a tax on this is
effectively a tax on Irish jobs for very little return."
And he pointed to a common failing with tax revenue
overestimates bandied about by politicians: "...only
Euro 5 million would be raised by taxing Irish-located
telephone betting businesses such as Paddy Power and
Boyles.
"And by the way, HRI is already way
overfunded in comparison to other countries," the
spokesman added. "What exactly has happened to the Euro
545 million in direct grants they have received over the
past eight years?"
By the end of this year, that
figure will have risen to over Euro 600 million as the
Sunday Independent revealed that the Irish government
intends to make Euro 68.128 million available to the
Horse and Greyhound Racing Fund.
The new figure,
down marginally on the original €69.7m in the Estimates,
was passed after a proposal to that effect by Minister
Cullen was given the green light at last Thursday's
joint committee meeting.
Minster Cullen told the
committee that the cash injection was needed to preserve
jobs in the industry, but the most recent figures
available, seen by the Sunday Independent, show that
over half of Horse Racing Ireland's expenditure goes on
prize money - typically to wealthy horse owners, many of
them outside the country.
Independent.ie points
out that in 2007, almost one-third of overall prize
money in Flat racing ended up in the hands of a mere
eight owners. These included the wife of tax exile John
Magnier, the Aga Khan, the Maktoums, Derrick Smith, a
former director of Ladbrokes based in Barbados, and
Michael Tabor, a former London bookie now enjoying tax
exile status in Monaco. The highest earning National
Hunt owner, with over Euro 1 million, was another tax
exile, JP McManus.
Although the horse and
greyhound racing fund has been reduced by almost 10
percent in the last 12 months, it makes up a third of
the country's total sports budget, up from one quarter
in 2008, because of cuts in other areas. The Sports
Capital Programme, which since its inception eight years
ago, has aided 6 700 projects across the country, has
been axed. And the Irish Sports Council, which funds 63
different sporting bodies, 33 local sports partnerships
and all our elite athletes, will receive less than Euro
60 million.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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