Revenues to
the UK
government –
and more
significantly
to
governments
of Caribbean
countries
such as
Antigua and
Barbuda,
Belize and
Costa Rica -
will be
reduced
immediately
and
employment
will be
adversely
affected.
If the
United
States was
not the main
centre of
the world
for
gambling,
the Bill,
ostensibly
adopted on
the basis of
morality,
may have
been
acceptable.
But, the
fact is that
the US is
the major
centre in
the world
for
gambling.
Five years
ago,
spending in
US
land-based
casinos
alone
reached
almost US$26
billion. It
is much more
today. And,
there is no
effort in
Congress to
close down
US casinos
on any moral
basis.
To the
contrary,
Nevada
Congressman
Jon Porter
introduced a
Bill last
May to study
whether on
line
gambling
sites, run
by US
companies,
could be
regulated
effectively.
Mr Porter’s
Bill is
backed by
casinos
whose lobby,
the American
Gaming
Association,
is on record
as saying
that US
based
casinos
would like
to open on
line.
Further,
the Bill,
passed by
Congress in
September,
expressly
makes legal
bets through
the Internet
on US horse
racing, US
Internet
lotteries,
US fantasy
sports and,
more
critically,
allows
states and
Native
American
tribes to
authorise
Internet-gaming
of almost
any kind
that occurs
wholly
within the
borders of
the state in
which they
are located.
So, even
though the
moral
argument is
being
touted, and
the
religious
right in the
US has
welcomed the
Bill, it has
little to do
with morals
and more to
do with
stopping
Internet
gaming
companies
from outside
the US
providing
services to
US
customers.
Bob
Goodlatte,
the
Congressman
from
Virginia,
summed up
this
protectionist
position
when he
declared
that the
Bill would
stop “US $6
billion from
being sucked
out of the
economy”
annually.
It is
this very
protectionist
position
that caused
successive
governments
of the small
Caribbean
Island,
Antigua and
Barbuda, to
bring a case
against the
US to the
World Trade
Organization
(WTO),
complaining
that in its
commitments
under the
General
Agreement on
Trade in
Services
(GATS), the
US bound
itself to
provide
market
access and
national
treatment to
the
cross-border
supply of
foreign
services
that come
within the
category of
‘other
recreational
services’
which
includes
gambling and
betting
services.
Antigua
and Barbuda
pointed out
to a WTO
Panel back
in 2003 that
while many
US operators
are allowed
to offer
gambling
services in
the US, US
authorities
take the
view that
all gaming
services
offered on a
cross-border
basis from
abroad are
unlawful. Up
to then, the
US had
enforced its
claims
administratively
by blocking
credit card
transactions
and
penalising
credit card
companies
and banks
that
facilitate
them, and by
punishing US
persons who
own gaming
entities
that provide
services to
US
residents.
Since
then, US
authorities
have
arrested
officials of
UK-based on
line gaming
companies,
and now
Congress has
adopted the
Unlawful
Internet
Gambling
Enforcement
Act which
effectively
turns into
law the
administrative
action they
have been
taking.
But, the
law – just
like the
administrative
actions –
adds up to a
violation by
the US of
its GATS
commitment.
A WTO
Panel has
already
ruled that
the US has
to bring its
laws into
conformity
with its
international
obligations.
This new
Bill, which
specifically
permits a
whole host
of domestic
Internet
betting
opportunities,
is even more
blatantly
discriminatory
against the
supply of
gaming
services to
the US from
other
countries
than US law
was before
Antigua and
Barbuda won
its ruling
from the WTO.
Therefore,
the WTO
should take
a very dim
view of this
very
protectionist
development
once Antigua
and Barbuda
draws it to
their
attention.
It does
appear that
some
Congressmen,
especially
Representative
Jim Leach of
Iowa and
Senator Bill
Frist who
piloted the
Bill in the
House and
Senate, had
their eyes
on the
upcoming
mid-term
elections in
the US where
they hoped
to drum up
votes from
the
religious
right.
Significantly,
the very
people that
the US
Congress
supposedly
voted to
protect from
Internet
gambling
have
expressed
outrage at
the Bill.
Michael
Bolcerek,
the
President of
the US Poker
Players
Association,
is reported
as stating
that
“allowing
the Bill to
become law
would run
contrary to
public
opinion” and
“the
millions of
Americans
who enjoy
playing this
great game
will have
the last
voice in the
debate comes
Election
day”.
The
context of
the Bill’s
passage also
raises
serious
questions of
just how
much study
Senators
gave to it,
and the
extent to
which they
really
understood
that it was
also a trade
issue with
implications
for the US
in the WTO.
The
Senate
adopted the
Bill in a
late night
pre-recess
session of
Congress.
It was
tagged on at
the last
minute to
the Safe
Port Act
that was
designed to
stop
companies
from other
countries
(such as
almost
happened
with a Dubai
company
earlier this
year) having
security
rights at a
US port.
Many of
those who
voted for
the Bill to
cramp
Internet
gambling
were really
concerned
about the
security of
US ports.
Sharp
teeth will
be given to
the Bill
after the
President
signs it
into law.
Then, the US
Treasury
Department,
the Federal
Reserve and
the
Department
of Justice
will write
the
regulations
to enforce
the law.
It looks,
therefore,
as if the
battlefield
for this
issue is
where
Antigua and
Barbuda took
it in the
first place
– the WTO.
If not, a
sad
precedent
will be
accepted by
which the
ill-advised
domestic
legislation
of
countries,
even if it
is passed by
legislators
without full
understanding
of its
implications,
will prevail
over
international
trade rules
to the
detriment of
business and
employment.
----
From
Caribbean
Net News
Originally
published
October 5,
2006 2:14 am
ET