LEGALISE ONLINE GAMING, BETFAIR ADVISES AUSSIES
1 May 2009
Online gambling giant's recommendations made
to government committee on gambling
The Australian branch of online gambling group Betfair
is championing the cause of Internet gambling Downunder,
recommending to a government committee studying gambling
reform that legalising and regulating Internet casino
and poker gambling would be a good bet.
The
government's Productivity Commission is in the first
phase of a government consultation process to study
gambling reform, and has to date received over 200
submissions from interested parties other than Betfair.
In the next phase, public hearings are scheduled for
September, eventually leading to the Commission's full
report to the federal government in November 2009.
Many submissions made to the Commission thus far
have called for changes to the Interactive Gambling Act
2001, among them Betfair's suggestions which include
opening up online casino games and poker, and more
player-sensitive rules that will permit in-running bets.
Betfair claims that current bans are not practically
enforceable and merely drive Australians offshore in the
pursuit of their pastime.
The betting exchange
estimates that as much as A$ 300 million a year leaves
the country in bets with offshore Internet gambling
sites, cash that could stay at home in an enlightened
approach to the fait accompli of Internet gambling. The
submission signles out online poker for a special
mention, commenting: “Poker has undergone a phenomenal
rise in popularity in recent years, and as a result,
more and more poker and other card game players are
turning to the web.
“It is illegal to offer
online poker to Australian residents, but that hasn’t
prevented several large international operators from
creating an enormous customer base here – assisted by
promotional activities using high profile Australians
and cross-selling through ‘play for free’ sites. It is
estimated that more than A$300 million is bet by
Australians annually on online poker – and it’s a figure
that is rapidly growing.
“All revenues flow
directly offshore without any tax being paid in
Australia. Furthermore, players are gambling in a
largely unregulated environment, with little protection
offered to players in terms of fraud, security or harm
minimisation. The ban on offering interactive gaming to
Australians has had very little effect on curtailing the
enormous growth of that sector of the market in
Australia.
“Betfair advocates an approach based
on regulation, rather than attempts to prohibit the
activity. Only through regulation can effective player
protection initiatives be enforced in the online
environment.”
In its appeal for the legalisation
of in-running betting, the gambling group asserts:
“Australia is the only jurisdiction in the world that
allows online wagering on sport but at the same time
prevents punters from using the Internet to place
in-play bets. To put it another way, except in
Australia, wherever it is legal to place a wager over
the internet, it is also legal to do so in-play on a
racing or sporting event.
“Because there is no
law against someone in Australia betting online in-play
on sport (the prohibition is directed solely at the
operator) there is a large incentive for Australians to
bet with these overseas operators. As a result, licensed
Australian wagering operators are permanently losing the
business of punters who are lured to these sites by
offering in-play sports betting online. This means that
transactions are not regulated in Australia, there is no
requirement to place appropriate social harm
minimisation measures in place and no taxes or product
fees are returned to governments or sporting bodies.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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