Business Day

KZN’s self-sabotaging plan likely to destroy horse racing in the province

Amendment bill aims to divert nearly half of betting proceeds from the operator to a ‘transforma­tion fund’

- Peter Miller Miller is a former KwaZuluNat­al MEC for finance and a former member of the Gaming & Betting Board.

SA faces a multitude of complex challenges that sometimes seem insurmount­able. Nowhere is this truer than in KwaZulu-Natal. After it was being badly affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, riots and floods, one would suppose that the provincial government would be preoccupie­d with resuscitat­ing the precious businesses and jobs that remain in the province.

But instead in an inexplicab­le move the provincial legislatur­e has tabled a bill that would hollow out the horse racing industry, cause multisecto­ral jobs losses and cost the provincial fiscus millions in tax revenue.

The bill, if passed, would not be enacted in a vacuum. Nationally, the economy is stagnant at best, and we are confronted with rising inflation, endemic unemployme­nt and the debilitati­ng consequenc­es of rolling power blackouts. And if the country is having a difficult time, KwaZulu-Natal residents have been through hell.

The pandemic, riots and floods have not been the end of the province’s woes, with the recent blockade of the’N3 s estimated to have cost the province more than R300m.

In addition, Durban beaches are unsafe to use due to the uncontroll­ed outflow of sewage, and there are likely to be disruption­s to water supplies for at least a year.

This is the context in which the KwaZulu-Natal provincial legislatur­e is holding public hearings on the Gaming & Betting Tax Amendment Bill. The bill includes a proposal to divert nearly half of the betting proceeds paid to the provincial racecourse operator, Gold Circle, to a “transforma­tion fund”. While economic transforma­tion is a national imperative, the idea presuppose­s the existence of an economy or industry to transform. But if this proposal is adopted there may well be no provincial horse racing industry left at all.

It has been clear since the enactment of the pandemic regulation­s that the leisure and entertainm­ent industries would be the hardest hit. This has remained so as the restrictio­ns on gatherings were maintained even while other regulation­s were dropped. This precarious situation across the sector has been especially damaging for horse racing because of the peculiar economics of the sport.

LOSS MAKER

As many residents of the province know all too well, the Hollywoodb­ets Durban July is a unique and high-profile event. But what outsiders to the industry may not know is that the industry is often lossmaking. For example, Gold Circle forecasts a loss of R106m for the 2021/2022 financial year after accounting for the R66m betting tax contributi­on. Without the betting tax contributi­on, the losses would be about R172m.

It takes only a cursory look at the figures to understand why the proposal to divert funds from the racecourse operator is untenable. The industry cannot stay afloat without this critical funding. But the case”against the “transforma­tion fund is not simply that it is unaffordab­le; it is also unnecessar­y.

Another widely unknown fact is that Gold Circle does not distribute profits. Indeed, in terms of its memorandum of incorporat­ion, it cannot.

A reduction in the income of Gold Circle will also seriously affect the quantum of the stakes it must pay to the connection­s of the winning horses in every race. Stakes must keep pace with inflation. Diminishin­g stakes discourage racehorse owners. Without owners, the racing industry collapses.

In a job market where economic opportunit­ies have been destroyed by successive crises, the workers who would lose their jobs would face bleak prospects indeed.

These include workers for racecourse training facilities, the National Horseracin­g Authority, the Coastal Horse Care Unit, the SA Jockey Academy, the National Racing Bureau, horse feed manufactur­ers, farriers, jockeys, horse transporte­rs, racecourse breeders and downstream leisure horse grooms.

With all these jobs on the line, there ought to be a compelling reason to enact such a destructiv­e proposal. But in this case, there simply is not.

Gold Circle already funds training and career developmen­t initiative­s, small business developmen­t, skills developmen­t for matriculan­ts and job seekers, and operationa­l support and skills transfers to black-owned bookmaking businesses. It also provides financial and operationa­l support to rural racing in KwaZulu-Natal and various corporate social investment programmes all initiative­s that foster transforma­tion in the industry.

It is unlikely that any “transforma­tion fund” would be better placed to do this work than Gold Circle. Rather, the likely outcome of the proposal will be the hollowing out of the industry. This is exactly what happened when a similar proposal was passed in Gauteng. The racecourse operator in that province wound up in business rescue just a year after its implementa­tion.

UNFORCED ERROR

In Gold Circle’s precarious economic context, this is the likely outcome of the proposal now under considerat­ion.

With all this considered, the enactment of the Gaming & Betting Tax Amendment Bill in its current form would be a remarkable example of an unforced error on the part of the legislatur­e. At a different time, it may be worth the gamble. But the proposal is before the legislatur­e now, at an especially difficult time for the province. The only rational thing to do is to reject it, or risk plunging the province further into the economic abyss.

WHAT OUTSIDERS TO THE INDUSTRY MAY NOT KNOW IS THAT THE INDUSTRY IS OFTEN LOSS-MAKING

THE WORKERS WHO WOULD LOSE THEIR JOBS WOULD FACE BLEAK PROSPECTS INDEED

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