NEW UK LEVY THREAT FOR OFFSHORE INTERNET GAMBLING
SITES
1 May 2009
Sports minister Gerry Sutcliffe is having a
busy week...
The British government's minister for sports, Gerry
Sutcliffe, is having a busy week with gambling interests
front and centre. He is not only working on an
anti-corruption task force to combat sports bet cheating
(see previous InfoPowa report) but is now embroiled in
arguments that offshore Internet gambling sites that
advertise in the UK should be coughing up more money for
gambling addiction research and support for horseracing.
The Financial Times reports this week that if some
British politicians and bookies have their way, a new
levy could result in demands for millions of pounds
sterling in levies from Internet gambling firms based in
jurisdictions like Gibraltar, the Isle of Man, Alderney,
Malta and Antigua, all of which enjoy "white listing"
enabling them to advertise in the UK.
Apparently
MPs have complained about the unfairness of
British-based operators paying addiction research and
other levies while operators licensed offshore are
allowed to advertise their products in the UK, yet pay
nothing.
The view is shared by UK-based
bookmakers who this week agreed to a further year of
contributions to the Horserace Betting Levy, amounting
to 10 percent of their gross profits and totalling
around GBP 100 million.
Sutcliffe is to announce
today a review by the Gambling Commission and civil
servants aimed at creating a fairer system of payments
and “a more level playing field between British
businesses and their overseas counterparts”.
As
well as contributing to the horseracing levy, companies
that have offshore servers such as PartyGaming, 888,
Sportingbet and Betfair could be expected to help pay
for regulating the industry and the treatment of problem
gambling.
Just one of the problems faced by such
a review will be whether it is possible to distinguish
between the profits offshore companies make from UK
activities and those made from non-UK punters in order
to determine the quantum of the levy.
The
commission and the Department for Culture, Media and
Sport will also review the controls introduced in the
2005 Gambling Act that created a regulated market in
Britain for online operators.
Since September
2007, companies licensed in UK-recognised licensing
jurisdictions such as Alderney, Gibraltar, Malta,
Antigua and the Isle of Man have been allowed to
advertise under regulations policed by the commission.
But MPs have been pressing ministers to explain why
significant amounts of the GBP 1.4 billion generated by
online gambling in the UK goes abroad.
Sutcliffe
said the Gambling Act, though freeing up the industry,
was aimed at protecting consumers. “We have taken steps
in the right direction, but technology is changing and
attitudes are changing,” he said.
The minister
said he recognised that Britain’s 15 percent gaming
taxation regime discouraged operators from basing their
servers in the UK, but the issue was one for the
Treasury to examine.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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