NEW UK 'SECONDARY LICENSING' FOR OFFSHORE BOOKIES?
25 December 2009
Offshore betting industry awaits government
moves following review, but warns against 'unnecessary
measures'
Is the UK government contemplating a 'secondary
licensing' scheme to regulate offshore bookies? It's a
question the industry is asking following a review of
the migration offshore by many UK bookies in an attempt
to remain competitive in low tax jurisdictions.
The Guardian newspaper carried a long article on the
issue this week, reporting that the UK government could
soon act to regulate the increasing number of online
bookmakers based offshore.
Apparently the
government is planning to recommend a new licensing
regime for offshore bookmakers, justifying it as a move
to ensure they provide information about suspicious
betting patterns.
In April 2009 the government
commissioned a study on how regulatory control could be
established, notably including how it could ensure that
'fair contributions' towards the cost of such a
secondary regulation could be made by UK companies
operating offshore. It is known that the subject of
contributions to British horseracing and other sports is
also a goal of non-government sports bodies in the UK.
The results of the study are to be released early
2010 by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport and
the UK Gambling Commission, and are said to contain
recommendations for a 'secondary licensing' initiative,
although it is believed that the proposal does not go so
far as compelling offshore operators to pay horseracing
levies.
"Senior racing industry insiders say they
have been reassured by the sports minister, Gerry
Sutcliffe, that the move will not close off the debate
about the future of the levy," the Guardian report
discloses. "When he launched the review he said "getting
a fairer deal for UK operators" was one of his "top
priorities".
The Guardian claims that the move
offshore by the online operations of William Hill and
Ladbrokes this year has cost racing an estimated GBP 4.2
million, and the overall take from the levy on
bookmakers' gross profits was GBP 93 million in 2008-09,
down 20 percent on the previous year.
Under the
new system, overseas-based bookmakers would additionally
have to be licensed in Britain. That would bring them
under the aegis of the Gambling Act, and force them to
share information on illicit gambling.
"The
mechanism could be a requirement to have a co.uk website
address, or a head office based in the UK and to pay a
licensing fee to the Gambling Commission. A failure to
comply could lead to a ban from advertising in Britain,"
the newspaper reports.
Foreign-based bookmakers
interviewed by the Guardian said that such measures
would be unnecessary and unworkable, potentially cutting
off a valuable flow of advertising revenue into Britain
and starving sports of sponsorship. They say they are
happy to share information on suspect betting patterns
and most claim to do so already.
The Remote
Gambling Association, which represents the biggest
players in the area, appeared to take a more flexible
approach, saying it was ready to support the concept of
dual licensing, providing a workable solution could be
found and it was not seen as a precursor to the
government trying to claw back tax revenues or for
sports to progress their arguments for a "betting
right".
Clive Hawkswood, chief executive of the
RGA, said a formal consultation would be required on any
new licensing measures but indicated his members would
be prepared to listen to the proposals. The likely
six-figure licensing fee, to cover administration costs,
would be unlikely to prove a stumbling block, he said.
"The reason our companies are offshore is not
because of the Gambling Commission, but because of tax.
If they wanted to go for this dual licensing approach,
we'd have to sit down and work through the detail. But
none of that is undo-able," he said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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