CZECH LAND BETTING UNDER PRESSURE FROM ONLINE
GAMBLING
27 March 2009
Decision earlier this year to licence and
regulate Internet gambling bites betting shops
Land betting shops in the Czech Republic are taking
strain following the government's decision earlier this
year to regulate and licence online gambling, reports
the Prague Post. Local companies welcomed the move to
free up the Internet and enable them to compete with
offshore firms, but initial indications are that it has
led to a decline in land business.
The newspaper
reports that as a result many of the country's largest
betting companies, such as Tipsport, which owns 1 020
shops in the Czech Republic, are now planning to close
dozens of locations. After only three months, online
gambling accounts for 30 percent of Tipsport's business,
said spokesman Lubomír Ježek, who expects an even
greater interest in online gambling in the future.
"We see the Internet as a new opportunity, rather
than something to replace brick-and-mortar shops," Ježek
said.
Ježek hopes that Czech firms will now lure
Czechs away from foreign gambling companies. "After the
first analysis, we see that many clients who used to bet
online with foreign companies are coming to Tipsport,"
he said. "Czechs like to bet with Czech companies, and
we think this will continue."
Tomáš Bahník, a
spokesman for the Fortuna betting group, which has about
650 shops in the Czech Republic, told the Prague Post
that Internet betting has skyrocketed since the new
legislation, accounting for 25 percent of total business
and causing a 5 percent decline in business in their
land outlets. Like Ježek, Bahník expects that Internet
gambling will increase, resulting in the closure of some
of Fortuna's less frequented shops.
"We will
optimise our branch offices system in the long term,"
Bahník said. "We will reduce the number of [land]
offices to work more effectively."
The Prague
Post report highlights a complaint by local betting
companies on the prevalence of foreign online betting
firms doing business in the region. Local operators say
that such companies have an unfair advantage because
they are not subject to Czech law and taxes.
"Foreign companies have always worked here illegally,"
Bahník said. "Making the market free for all companies
was the solution for all interested parties. But Czech
companies still have worse conditions than foreign
betting companies, which don't have to pay taxes."
Radek Ležatka, a spokesman for the Finance Ministry,
said that the regulation of online gambling was only
accepted by the government when Czech companies found a
way to monitor their online users and exclude underaged
gamblers..
Under the new Czech law, those who
want to gamble online must first register in a shop,
providing verification that they are over 18. If they
cannot provide identification, they are not allowed to
access the online gambling portal.
The latest
figures from the Finance Ministry show that gambling is
a significant industry in the Czech Republic, accounting
for more than 108 billion Koruny (180 CZK = Euro
6.61726) in bets in 2007. Ježek explained that most
Czechs like to bet on sports results, specifically
soccer, which accounts for 60 percent of Tipsport's
business. Business in branches may be down, he said, but
there is no sign that the gambling industry is losing
popularity.
"We have the same odds on the
Internet and in our locations, and we see it as a big
advantage to be able to offer both types of gambling to
our customers," he said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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