CLUBS AUSTRALIA ARGUES AGAINST INTERNET GAMBLING
18 December 2009
Productivity Commission's recommendations
"lacking in common sense" says land gambling trade body
The president of the land gambling trade association
Clubs Australia, Peter Newell has questioned the
recommendations of the government-commissioned
Productivity Commission rgearding changes to Australian
gambling.
The Commission recently submitted 41
recommendations, among them a notable comment that
regulating online gambling may be a better course than
banning it (see previous InfoPowa report).
Newell
argued that liberalising internet gambling and the uses
of credit cards are laws "lacking common sense," when
online gambling revenues grow a quarter every year
compared with the 1.1 percent per annum in [land] poker
machines.
In a press release issued this week,
Newell was protesting the tough restrictions on land
"pokies" and said that the Productivity Commission's
recommendations had failed to recognise the
contributions that clubs had made to local economies
such as employment and donations to charities. His
statement included the claim that the new pokie
restrictions could be at the cost of 23 000 jobs
throughout Australia.
Newell also claimed that
the rate of problem gambling on pokies is less than 1
percent, indicating that this sector was not a
significant generator of problem gamblers.
The
Productivity Commission has prepared 41 draft
recommendations following its probe into the gambling
industry in Australia.
Among the proposals are
restricting poker machine players to bets of A$1
($1.26), down from the current maximum of A$10, and a
A$20 limit on one machine at a time.
The
commission has also suggested a A$200 ATM withdrawal
limit on cash machines located nearby.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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