Published: Friday, September 22, 2006 Online-Casinos.com
GIBRALTAR ONLINE CASINO COMPANIES PLEASED WITH TAX RULING
European Court ruling upholds Gibraltar's 1969 constitutional authority on taxation
Gibraltar-based online gambling companies had cause to open the champagne this week as news came in that the European Court had removed the threat of increased taxation by upholding the self-governing territory's autonomy to control its own taxation under its 1969 Constitution.
Accountancy Age reported that as online gaming companies are all dotcom businesses, it has been easy for them to establish headquarters in the low tax jurisdiction of Gibraltar. This has provided the companies with a significant edge on other sectors because they have not had to pay the UK corporation tax rate of 30 percent, creating massive savings for shareholders.
But these significant tax benefits have been under threat from the European Union, which has been working to abolish Gibraltar's exempt company tax regime. In April 2004 the European Commission said that tax rules in Gibraltar provided companies domiciled there with an unfair advantage.
The EC said this amounted to 'regional selectivity', and also took issue with the fact that taxes in Gibraltar were based on payroll and the occupation of business premises, which meant that businesses would be unlikely to pay any tax liability.
The commission said that by 2010 Gibraltar would have to abolish its exempt company tax regime and implement a replacement tax regime instead. This raised the possibility that online gaming groups based in Gibraltar could find themselves paying corporation tax of 30 percent.
A recent European Court ruling, however, has eased these fears. Gibraltar's 1969 constitution provides the territory with fiscal autonomy and the region should be able to continue providing companies with an attractive tax regime.
One of the online gambling companies based in the territory, Party Gaming's group finance director Martin Weigold said the ruling had removed the risk that PartyGaming and other companies based in Gibraltar would have to pay the full UK tax rate of 30 percent.
'It's effectively removed one of the risks associated with the replacement tax regime that will come into effect at the end of 2010. We expect a low-cost tax regime that's non-discriminatory to take its place when the tax-exempt scheme is phased out,' Weigold said.