Gambling firms rake in £1 billion extra from punters as calls for tax rises mount.
The UK's lucrative gaming industry has revealed a significant surge in profits, with betting companies generating an additional £1 billion from punters in the year to March. The latest data shows that the industry made £12.6 billion from services excluding lotteries, a 9.3% increase on the previous year's figure of £11.5 billion.
A major contributor to this growth was online casino gaming, which saw a 55% rise in gross gambling yield compared to pre-pandemic levels. This comes as campaigners have long argued that online casinos are particularly addictive and should be subject to higher taxes to help mitigate the social harm caused by gambling.
Critics say that the industry is making "vast and growing profits" through highly addictive products, often targeting vulnerable communities. Iain Duncan Smith, chair of a cross-parliamentary group examining gambling harm, has called for more addictive forms of gambling like online casinos and machines in adult gaming centres to be taxed at a higher rate.
Meanwhile, the Treasury committee has been examining gambling taxes and believes that addictive online betting should face higher taxes than forms of gambling with cultural benefits. The committee's chair, Meg Hillier, warned that the government must not "cave in" to industry scaremongering about job losses caused by higher taxes.
The gaming industry is expected to lobby the Chancellor on Wednesday over proposed tax rises, despite its own powerful supporters arguing against increases. Industry bigwigs, including Joanne Whittaker, chief executive of Betfred, have warned that even a modest rise in machine games duty would have a devastating impact and cut the industry's contribution to Treasury coffers.
However, campaigners remain unconvinced by these claims, with many warning that the industry is operating a "black market" and paying no tax. The Betting and Gaming Council has defended its members, arguing that they generate £6.8 billion for the economy, contribute over £4 billion in tax, and support 109,000 jobs.
As the Chancellor prepares to make their budget speech on Wednesday, campaigners are likely to push for increased taxes on the gaming industry to help tackle the social harm caused by gambling.
The UK's lucrative gaming industry has revealed a significant surge in profits, with betting companies generating an additional £1 billion from punters in the year to March. The latest data shows that the industry made £12.6 billion from services excluding lotteries, a 9.3% increase on the previous year's figure of £11.5 billion.
A major contributor to this growth was online casino gaming, which saw a 55% rise in gross gambling yield compared to pre-pandemic levels. This comes as campaigners have long argued that online casinos are particularly addictive and should be subject to higher taxes to help mitigate the social harm caused by gambling.
Critics say that the industry is making "vast and growing profits" through highly addictive products, often targeting vulnerable communities. Iain Duncan Smith, chair of a cross-parliamentary group examining gambling harm, has called for more addictive forms of gambling like online casinos and machines in adult gaming centres to be taxed at a higher rate.
Meanwhile, the Treasury committee has been examining gambling taxes and believes that addictive online betting should face higher taxes than forms of gambling with cultural benefits. The committee's chair, Meg Hillier, warned that the government must not "cave in" to industry scaremongering about job losses caused by higher taxes.
The gaming industry is expected to lobby the Chancellor on Wednesday over proposed tax rises, despite its own powerful supporters arguing against increases. Industry bigwigs, including Joanne Whittaker, chief executive of Betfred, have warned that even a modest rise in machine games duty would have a devastating impact and cut the industry's contribution to Treasury coffers.
However, campaigners remain unconvinced by these claims, with many warning that the industry is operating a "black market" and paying no tax. The Betting and Gaming Council has defended its members, arguing that they generate £6.8 billion for the economy, contribute over £4 billion in tax, and support 109,000 jobs.
As the Chancellor prepares to make their budget speech on Wednesday, campaigners are likely to push for increased taxes on the gaming industry to help tackle the social harm caused by gambling.