The lawmakers want to ensure that Bulgaria’s legislation is more closely aligned with international practice, and they want to call a halt to the national gambling regulator’s tactic of adding online gambling sites willy-nilly to the national blacklist of operators.
The move is a bipartisan one supported by MPs from the two parties in the ruling alliance, but it is as yet unclear when it will come to the floor for debate.
One of the major changes proposed is that of taxation, replacing the present 15 percent tax on gambling revenues with a one-off licensing fee of 50,000 euros and a 20 percent tax on the “difference between the bets made and the winnings paid out”.
Such a change should go some way to assuaging the fears of operators that over-taxation will make the market unsustainable, therefore discouraging licensee applications from foreign companies.
Lawmakers are also rethinking the Bulgarian Gambling Commission’s practice of blacklisting dozens of online gambling websites, requesting by court order that Bulgarian internet service providers block access.
They say that the tactic does not appear to have encouraged operators to licence, and that geolocation restrictions can be bypassed, rendering the efficiency of this sort of measure debatable.
The UK-based Remote Gaming Association, a trade body representing the interests of many of Europe’s leading operators, has characterized the proposed amendments as encouraging.