LADBROKES WARNS ON REGULATION / TAX
29 January 2010
UK gambling industry is worth GBP 6 billion
and employs over 100 000, says chief executive
Ladbroke's chief executive officer, Chris Bell, who
recently announced his impending departure from the UK
gambling group, has warned that Britain must take a more
enlightened approach to the regulation and taxation of
the bookmaking industry or risk damaging the nation's 8
600 betting shops.
Bell made the observation as
he unveiled a new report from independent accountants
Deloittes showing that the betting industry contributes
more than GBP 6 billion to the UK economy and sustains
in excess of 100 000 jobs.
Ladbrokes
commissioned the report after listening to "...a lot of
people in the corridors of power who have not realised
the scale of this industry. Politicians have been very
surprised by how much tax we pay and how many people we
employ," Bell said.
The report found that the
industry's retail, or betting shop, division alone
generates GBP 700 million in wages paid to staff and
pays GBP 700 million in taxes – almost as much as its
GBP 800 million operating profits.
"There are
few industry sectors that pay as much in tax as their
profits," Bell pointed out.
Of the GBP 3 billion
direct economic impact, betting shops provide GBP 2.2
billion, with gambling over the Internet, telephone and
exchanges providing the rest.
The industry
directly sustains 40 700 full-time jobs, mostly in
betting shops, while it indirectly supports a further 62
300. The report found its indirect economic impact to be
GBP 3.1 billion.
Pointing out that "...the
number of shops we have here is largely dependent on
taxation and regulation", Bell said: "For this industry
to be successful onshore and offshore, it needs a more
positive regulatory approach and a more sensible tax
approach."
He called for greater flexibility
over machines in the shops – either by raising the
current limit of four or allowing new games, and
Internet terminals in the shops – though he admitted
this would be a "hard sell" to the Treasury, bearing in
mind that such a move would enable Ladbrokes to redirect
bets to its offshore operations in Gibraltar where it
pays only nominal tax, so reducing the UK's tax take.
Bell gave an indication of the importance of the
Internet medium to gambling groups when h said that
without Internet connectivity in land betting shops,
these establishments would become "...just a resource
for information where people wander in and then use
their iPhone to place a bet".
Bell's warning was
perhaps designed to coincide with the looming prospect
of a general election in the UK, and the concomitant
political manoeuvring that such an event inevitably
brings about.
Politicians in the contesting
parties can be expected to talk about their taxation
policies and make decisions that can have far reaching
effects on industries, especially if these are not
well-informed.
2001's abolition of 9 percent
betting duty, based on turnover, and its replacement
with a 15 percent tax on gross profits is an example
that comes to mind.
Although Bell subsequently
denied that his warning was a pre-emptive strike against
political developments, he added that he did hope
politicians would responsibly use the report's factual
data rather than aim to 'score cheap political points'
in the run up to the election.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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