ANTIPODEAN ONLINE PUNTERS THE BIGGEST BETTERS
ANYWHERE
27 March 2009
Aussies and Kiwis spend an average of A$435 a
month on Internet gambling
Online punters Downunder wager more money online than
gamblers elsewhere in the world, reports the Melbourne
Sun Herald this weekend. The newspaper references a new
Canadian study by University of Lethbridge professors
Robert Wood and Robert Williams which used a research
base of 20 000 adults in 105 countries to reach its
conclusions.
The study claims that Australian
and New Zealand gamblers spend an average of A$435
online every month - five times what punters put through
land poker machines - and has prompted renewed calls for
bans on online gambling in Australia, the newspaper
reports.
The Uni Lethbridge study also found the
prevalence of problem gambling was up to four times
higher for Internet gamblers than those who used
traditional means such as poker machines, an apparent
conflict with previous studies including the regular
gambling prevalence studies carried out in the UK by the
Gambling Commission. Whether this is a conflict, or an
indication that Aussie and Kiwi gamblers are more prone
to addiction by higher usage, is unclear. The finding is
also dependent on what the researchers define as
"problem gambling."
Professors Robert Wood and
Robert Williams, who conducted the Lethbridge study,
concluded: "Australian Internet gamblers do report
higher average monthly gambling spending than the
overall average we observed among our sample.This would
suggest that Australian Internet gamblers do indeed
spend more on gambling compared with Internet gamblers
from most other countries."
The Salvation Army's
problem-gambling service co-ordinator for Australia,
Gerard Byrne, said he was not surprised by the figures
and called on the Federal Government to ban credit-based
betting.
"People are certainly reporting more
and more usage of online gambling," Byrne said. "I'm not
surprised New South Wales is near the top in problem
online gambling. We've got a culture where gambling is
the state pastime."
Clubs NSW chief executive
David Costello said online gambling should be subject to
the same restrictions as the heavily regulated land
gambling industry.
"This is a very real issue,"
Costello said. "It confirms what we've been saying for
the past two years: the incidence of Internet gambling
is infinitely increasing."
He said there was a
danger of young people using their parent's credit
cards, with not enough age checks completed.
The
news comes after online gambling group Centrebet posted
a 23 percent jump in Australian online revenue last
month. The company is also expecting a 10 percent
increase for the 12 months to June 2009.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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