Dirk Vennix, CEO of the Association of British Bookmakers

“There is no evidence that restricting B2 stakes will do anything to minimise problem gambling”

2014-05-02
Reading time 1:14 min
(UK).- Responding to the UK Government’s gambling review, the Association of British Bookmakers has issued this statement: “In March the industry saw a punitive tax increase on betting machines. Today’s announcement will further restrict growth for the sector and mean hundreds of shops and thousands of jobs are now at risk.”

The statements of the Association of British Bookmakers Government said that the government has failed to listen to more than one million voters who petitioned Downing Street this week to call for a proportionate response to the gambling industry. “Enough is enough. Betting shops are fully committed to tackle problem gambling even further, but this needs to be based on facts, not scaremongering.”

Dirk Vennix, chief executive of the Association of British Bookmakers, said: “The proposed changes to the way customers are able to stake more than £50 will impose extra costs on the industry whilst there is no evidence to show that restricting B2 stakes will do anything to minimise problem gambling. Limiting access to one product just means the vast majority of responsible gamblers will be inconvenienced and problem gamblers will gamble on other products."

“We also want to working constructively with the Government and Gambling Commission to keep problem gambling at the record low levels. Because we share the same objective - that one problem gambler is one too many. That’s why we want to work with all parties to build the best possible harm prevention framework."

“The industry’s new Code of Conduct for Player Protection has already had a significant impact with breaks in play, increased customer interaction and more self-exclusions. We look forward to seeing the results of the independent research into problem gambling which are being carried out by Nat Cen, because regulatory decisions have to be based on empirical evidence. “We will await the LCCP consultation, and hope this is based on a proper regulatory impact assessment.”

Related topics:
Leave your comment
Subscribe to our newsletter
Enter your email to receive the latest news
By entering your email address, you agree to Yogonet's Terms of use and Privacy Policies. You understand Yogonet may use your address to send updates and marketing emails. Use the Unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.
Unsubscribe
EVENTS CALENDAR