The Remote Gambling Association has today lodged a state aid complaint with the European Commission challenging the compatibility of the Greek Government's new gambling law with EU State aid requirements.
Following the recent adoption by the Greek Parliament of the new gambling law which regulates remote gambling, the complaint focuses on the favourable tax treatment afforded to the part state-owned gambling operator OPAP’s land-based services in relation to private online gambling operators.
In particular, it cites that following the introduction of the new regime for online gambling, OPAP would unjustifiably and favourably be exempt from the 30 per cent gross profits tax on its offline land-based gambling products, a tax which online gambling operators are required to pay under the new law. Furthermore, the law also imposes a 10 per cent withholding tax on all customers’ winnings with online operators, whereas the customers of OPAP’s land-based services are exempt from any tax on winnings of €100 or less.
Clive Hawkswood, RGA chief executive, commented: "Despite the RGA having had a constructive relationship with the Greek authorities during the development of the new legislation, significant concerns remain about the viability and legality of the market under the terms of the new law.
"Remote operators wish to obtain licences in Greece and to continue to offer Greek consumers competitive and well-regulated products. However, the current unjustified fiscal favouritism being afforded to OPAP makes this extremely difficult and we urge the European Commission to investigate the new legislation for being in breach of state aid rules."
The Greek government owns 34 per cent of OPAP (valued at around €1.17bn), which currently has the exclusive right to offer sports betting and lottery products to Greek consumers. OPAP’s land-based service does not pay any form of gambling tax on stakes or gross profits.
Hawkswood added: "We are fully aware of the fiscal pressures on the Greek authorities at present, but they do not justify the imposition of anti-competitive tax provisions which benefit the existing monopoly gambling provider over private online operators soon to be licensed in Greece. Not only does such action not conform with EU State aid rules, but if implemented, it will have a damaging impact on the private sector and associated growth and employment opportunities, as well as curbing competition and consumer choice. As such, we feel compelled to take this action and challenge the Greek authority’s favourable tax treatment of the part state-owned gambling operator OPAP."
In lodging this complaint, the RGA has stressed that its position is not that online and offline gambling services should necessarily be taxed in the same manner, rather that any differentiation in taxation between offline and online operators should be objectively justified in consideration of the purpose and objectives of the particular tax regime in question.