The Executive Council of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
(HKSAR), hoping to combat rampant illegal gambling on horse races
while maintaining stable revenue from betting, approved in Hong
Kong on Friday proposals to reform horse race betting's duty
system.
The Betting Duty (Amendment) Bill 2006 will be presented to the
Legislative Council on April 26 for final approval before going
into effect.
According to the proposals, a single set of rates will
progressively apply to gross profits with duty at 72.5 percent up
to 11 billion HK dollars (US$142 million), increasing by half a
percentage point for every 1 billion HK dollars up to 15 billion HK
dollars, and at 75 percent for the amount exceeding 15 billion HK
dollars.
If the proposals were finally legalized, the betting duty will
no longer be charged on betting turnover with the introduction of a
single set of rates.
The Hong Kong Jockey Club will guarantee not less than 8 billion
HK dollars of duty payable to the HKSAR government during each of
the three years after implementation.
A review will be conducted two years after implementation,
according to the proposals.
The club will be allowed to provide rebates to high-value
bettors who lose money, to increase its competitiveness against
illegal bookmakers while the regulatory regime of horse race
betting will also be rationalized to bring it broadly in line with
legal football betting and lotteries.
Speaking to the press, Secretary for Home Affairs Dr Patrick Ho
said the reforms aim not to encourage gambling in Hong Kong but
just want to rationalize the regulatory system for horse-race
betting, and combat rampant illegal gambling on horse races, while
maintaining revenue from betting at a steady level.
Ho said the government's gambling policy is to restrict
opportunities to a limited number of authorized and regulated
outlets.
"The underlying rationale is not to encourage gambling," Ho
said, adding the Hong Kong Jockey Club's horse race betting license
will include mandatory conditions to prevent underage and excessive
gambling, and minimize the negative impact of authorized horse race
betting.
According to Ho, the club is prohibited from taking bets from
minors and offering any credit for betting, and from paying
dividends or rebates on bets to minors. It must restrict related
promotional activities and take appropriate steps to prevent
pathological gambling.
"Our proposals seek to strike a balance between the need to
combat illegal horse race betting effectively, and the need to
address public concerns about the negative social impact of
gambling," Ho added.
(Xinhua News Agency April 8, 2006)