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Peak Body Urges Change to Betting Tax Havens


12 April 2016 at 11:04 am
Lina Caneva
Welfare peak body the South Australian Council of Social Service is calling for sweeping changes to the taxation of online gambling to remove what it claims is the abuse of tax havens in Australian betting.

Lina Caneva | 12 April 2016 at 11:04 am


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Peak Body Urges Change to Betting Tax Havens
12 April 2016 at 11:04 am

Welfare peak body the South Australian Council of Social Service is calling for sweeping changes to the taxation of online gambling to remove what it claims is the abuse of tax havens in Australian betting.

SACOSS said sports betting is Australia’s fastest growing form of gambling, and it is taxed by the jurisdiction where a betting company is licensed, not where the bet is actually placed or where the sports event is being held.

It said gambling corporations are therefore free to “jurisdiction shop” to get licensed, with the result that the Northern Territory and Norfolk Island are operating as virtual gambling tax havens.

“International bookmakers Sportsbet, Bet365 and William Hill are all registered in the Northern Territory – helping the Territory to clock up 32 per cent of Australian sports betting expenditure. South Australia has just 1.6 per cent of the national sports betting market,” SACOSS CEO Ross Womersley said.

But Womersley said the figures didn’t take account of Norfolk Island’s own licensing system and attracted one of the world’s largest betting corporations, Ladbrokes, and a range of smaller bookmakers.

“Norfolk Island caps gambling taxes at $300,000 per year per licence – a very small amount for a global betting company. The Northern Territory cap is $500,000 per year, while SA has potentially higher effective tax rates with no cap,” he said.

“Sports betting is already lightly taxed by comparison with poker machines and lotteries, but the use of virtual tax havens by gambling companies means that they are paying next to nothing to South Australia while our community has to pay for the damages caused by problem gambling.

“When a gambling corporation does not have to be incorporated or resident in a jurisdiction, but can still use the licence of a jurisdiction like Norfolk Island to lessen their taxes, I think we have gone beyond real business and are talking about virtual tax havens and, legal, tax avoidance.

“After the leak of the Panama papers, the world is well aware of the issue of corporations gaming tax systems to their advantage, but here we have Australian governments being complicit in behaviour which undermines our tax base and the ability of governments to pay for vital services.”

Womersley said Australia needed to move to a system of “point of consumption” gambling taxes where expenditure is taxed where it is spent, not where some corporate licence is nominally held.

“Point of consumption gambling taxes were flagged in April last year, and the South Australian government was to lead national conversations, but there is no national agreement and so we see gambling tax havens flourishing,” he said.

“This is a regrettable but clear example of the negative consequences of competitive federalism when states and territories race to the bottom to attract business at the expense of the tax base.”

SACOSS said it would release a major report on gambling taxation in the next month.


Lina Caneva  |  Editor  |  @ProBonoNews

Lina Caneva has been a journalist for more than 35 years. She was the editor of Pro Bono Australia News from when it was founded in 2000 until 2018.


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