ONLINE GAMBLING A REAL CONTRIBUTOR TO MALTA ECONOMY
16 October 2009
But host governments need to remember that
this is a very flexible and mobile industry
One of the more interesting articles published on
Internet gambling over the weekend appeared on Sunday in
the Malta publication Malta Today.
The newspaper
interviewed Aj Thompson, the COO of Malta-based gaming
company Tain, who claimed that in addition to being good
tax-paying corporate citizens on the Mediterranean
island, the online gambling industry contributes
significantly to the domestic economy through its staff
spending.
Thompson pointed to official government
numbers that indicated that the industry's direct
contribution in the form of taxes was some Euro 15.6
million. However, the real contribution was more like
Euro 30 million or more if the domestic spending of well
paid staff was factored in to the equation.
The
newspaper appeared to support this, introducing its
editorial with the comment: "They’re single, live in
flash apartments, and earn thousands of euros every
month: iGaming employees live it up!"
Thompson
said he arrived at the figure of Euro 30 million by
referring to a study his company had recently conducted
which showed that the added value left by industry
employees in the local economy is generally the same as
the amount gained by the exchequer in taxes.
Tain
employs 46 people with an average age of 26, Thompson
revealed. “A lot of them are single, rent out apartments
on their own at higher budgets than usual, spend money
on entertainment, clothes and other goods,” he said.
Seventy percent of Tain's staff were Maltese - a
considerably higher proportion than the average for the
island, which is around 40 percent, he claimed.
Employing Maltese staff was preferred because local
recruits tended to have stronger loyalty and were less
likely to job-hop or leave, he explained, saying:
“Maltese people are happier to stay in Malta.”
The online gambling executive warned that there was a
risk that the industry could create what he called a
'false economy' on the island.
“When we got
here, the average wage in other sectors was of Euro 800
to Euro 950, and we were paying Euro 1 400 to Euro 1
650,” he said. Nowadays, the average salaries at Tain
stand at Euro 1 900-Euro 2 000 monthly for the junior
staff, with more senior people earning around Euro 10
000 a month.”
Thompson also emphasised the
flexible and highly mobile nature of the online gambling
industry should local conditions make companies less
competitive. “...this industry moves from one place to
another, and it can," he said, adding that if the
benefits of basing a business in a particular country
are removed or changed, enterprises with mobility will
inevitably consider other locations that allow them to
remain competitive.
He illustrated the point by
commenting that the removal of VAT advantages had hurt a
number of players "...because it’s 18 percent we’re
talking about.”
To give an idea of how fast the
industry can move, Thompson recalled how he relocated
Tain Operations from Curacao, in the Caribbean, to Costa
Rica overnight. He named Albany, Gibraltar, Isle of Man,
Costa Rica, Curacao, Antigua and Australia as possible
alternative licensing jurisdictions.
The number
of iGaming companies registered in Malta has reached
330, employing around 2 500 people, the article
revealed. Retailing and property letting experts
estimated the added value left by this new population of
employees to be very high, it noted.
Federation
of Estate Agents President Ian Casolani told the
newspaper: “Scarily enough, the rental market very much
depends on iGaming employees nowadays, with budgets that
range from a minimum of Euro 350 to Euro 6 000 per
month." The norm, says Casolani, ranges between Euro 600
and Euro 1 000 monthly.
Philip Fenech, president
of the island's tourism sector, told Malta Today that
the contribution to the domestic economy of iGaming
employees “...is very, very substantial”.
“Much
of the money earned by staff in this sector goes through
our system – bars, hotels, supermarkets and other retail
establishments, Fenech said. "Although the [global
financial] crisis hit many sectors, gaming was minimally
hit. My reports are that these temporary foreigners are
considered to be tourists on a long holiday, when one
considers the way they spend in leisure. My reports come
from gyms, restaurants, fashion outlets, supermarkets,
clubs and other forms of leisure.
"They live it
up here. They produce wealth and they enjoy wealth.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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