TAXMAN COULD NIX POKER IN BRITAIN
1 January 2010
New tax laws change the status quo of poker
operators...and not in a good way
The respected Guardian newspaper in Britain this week
considered the adverse impact of new UK tax provisions
on poker operators that could be so severe as to
effectively kill interest in providing the game.
Writer Victoria Coren, herself a skilled and experienced
poker player as well as a senior journalist, looked
ahead to 2010 in an article that postulated a serious
risk that regular games will die before the end of the
new year.
Coren examined the case of the card
room at the Victoria Casino in London, which she
described as the headquarters of British poker.
"Local rivals come and go, but can never truly compete –
or couldn't, until the government interfered," writes
Coren.
"The 2009 spring budget introduced a
stupid, greedy, ill-thought-out change to the tax rules.
Casinos always paid full tax on their table games, but
Valued Added Tax only on poker. That's because poker was
a "service" rather than a "business" – at the Vic (or
similar outfits) customers play against each other, not
the house, paying only a small hourly fee for table
hire.
"The budget ignored this, slapping a full
tax rate on poker as well. The money raised will be too
small to affect the nation's finances: it's just big
enough to cripple the Vic. It has cost them an extra
million (GBP) so far this year. If poker is as expensive
for them as roulette, while being so much less
lucrative, why should they bother to keep having it?"
Coren goes on to urge the poker playing public to
write their political representatives and the Chancellor
of the Exchequer [finance minister] demanding that the
punitive tax be removed to preserve the game and the
companies that offer it.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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