Poker Tax Part 2 of 3
On May 6, 2009 three bills were introduced in the House of Representative, two by Rep. Barney Frank and one by Rep. Jim McDermott. The bills were and now are the subject of much discussion.
My impression of the bills and my present forecast future for legalized internet gambling is as follows:
First, the bills can be broken down into their goals. H.R. 2266 extends the implementation of the UIGEA regulations from December 1, 2009 to December 1, 2010. This bill may help the financial services sector, in delaying some implementation costs. This bill can be passed on its own.
The second and third bills, H.R. 2267 and H.R. 2268 respectively establish a federal licensing system and a tax system. These bills seem to be very much inter-dependent and will survive or die as a package. In simple terms, the licensing bill creates a system of regulation which is binding on the states, unless they opt out within 90 days of enactment. This point, may be a deal breaker on its own. The reason is that right now, under UIGEA, states can adopt wholly intrastate internet gambling. This means that large population states, like, California, Texas, New York, Pennsylvania, can capture their the tax revenue and jobs entirely, while the states with lesser population, probably will not have the critical mass necessary to make games (like poker) successful. So the conflict is inherent. Who would benefit beyond the small states, well large multi-state, and multi-national corporations for a start would want a single licensing regime that allows them to have a large scale marketing plan that crosses state borders with a unified message and that minimizes competition. Just how the various tribal interests will respond to the bills, is not totally clear to me at this time. Another aspect of the licensing bill is who is qualified and who is disqualified to be issued licenses. At first blush, the major land based casino companies will surely qualify. Other corporate interests, may qualify as well. Unlikely to qualify are any of the off-shore companies, who offered internet gambling products in the U.S., or any of the officers, directors, or principal shareholders. Further, while some companies ceased to offer services post enactment of UIGEA, there is a distinct possibility that a provision in the licensing bill will be used to keep them out. The provision I am referring to is the requirement that all Federal and State tax returns must have been filed, and not be delinquent, with all taxes paid, including additions to tax, interest and penalties.
In my last note, I described the FBAR rules, well those would seem to be included. Further, as a condition of the application, all applicants submit to U.S. jurisdiction for all purposes. I question whether any of the off-shore operators will submit to jurisdiction with the risk of disqualification. But, one could argue that the off-shore companies will just not apply and continue business as usual. That is a distinct possibility, but they will be subject to claims of U.S. taxation and licensing fees regardless. The tax bill provides that licensees will pay a 2% of gross wager fee monthly, but unlicensed operators will be subject to a fee of 50%. How this fee will be assessed and collected from off-shore operators, is a bit outside the scope of this note. The tax bill does provide for information collection from players and withholding on all winnings as paid.
So, my conclusion is that the future is going to be filled with uncertainty over which form of regulation is adopted, a federal system with the states opting in, or opting out, and who the likely licensees will be. One thing is clear, while some have argued for legalization and taxation, what those advocates will likely find is that they will find a result dramatically different from what they expected.
Michael, a very interesting post thanks for writing it!
Very nice site! is it yours too
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Fiona, it is a great post thanks for writing it!
good content