Windsor Star

Hungary’s slot-machine ban bucks trend

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BUDAPEST, HUNGARY The government says it’s trying to cure poor Hungarians of a gambling addiction. The gambling industry says that authoritie­s are trying to seize control of a lucrative pastime.

Whatever the case, Hungary’s decision to ban the ubiquitous slot machines seen in pubs, bars and parlours across the country goes against a gambling boom seen elsewhere in Eastern Europe, even as economic times get tougher.

The government announced the ban Monday morning, after an extraordin­ary cabinet meeting called by Prime Minister Viktor Orban. It justified the surprise move by saying that tens of thousands of Hungarian families had been ruined by slot machines.

“Our objective is to ensure that our poorest, most disadvanta­ged and defenceles­s citizens … be prevented from having the opportunit­y of spending their money on gambling activities,” said State Secretary Janos Lazar.

The law, which is expected to take effect in a few days, forces slot machine operators to immediatel­y surrender their licences. Slot machines will have to be removed from pubs and gambling halls and will be allowed only in Hungary’s three casinos — two in Budapest, the capital, and one in Sopron, a city on the border with Austria.

The government had already been cracking down on slot machine addiction.

Tamas Huszar used to own eight slot machines, including four in a small pub he runs in north Budapest. After the government last year raised the monthly tax on each machine five-fold, from $450 to $2,250, Huszar decided to keep just one. Now he’ll have to give up that one, too.

“Not only is my income going to fall, but I will be forced to lay off employees,” Huszar said.

The Hungarian move bucks gambling trends elsewhere in the region. Casinos and betting parlours have been proliferat­ing in Bulgaria, Albania, Serbia and Czech Republic. In Serbia, a boom in football betting has led to wagers even on games in the Finnish lower divisions.

On Tuesday, just over 24 hours after Lazar’s announceme­nt, lawmakers in the Hungarian parliament voted 2381 in favour of the bill, with eight abstention­s. Experts estimate that there are 100,000 gambling addicts in Hungary, a country of 10 million people, and that another 500,000 are at risk of developing a gambling habit.

Istvan Schreiber, president of the Hungarian Gaming Associatio­n, said the industry has been blindsided by the government’s change of heart, especially because a law passed in 2011 allowed for new, serverbase­d slot machines due to be introduced early next year. Under the new system, slot machines would have been replaced by video terminals connected to a central computer, which would keep track of all gambling activities and could be monitored by state authoritie­s.

But that has been replaced by a blanket ban.

“The government has changed the law from one day to the next,” said Schreiber, who also feared that the ban could strengthen illegal gambling. “Evidently, there is a business decision behind it. We’ll see what is going to happen.”

Schreiber said the associatio­n was considerin­g filing class suits in European courts against the ban.

Another trade group, the ECasino Associatio­n, appealed to President Janos Ader to ask the Constituti­onal Court to review the law before he signs it.

The Ministry of Economic Affairs rejected the argument that the ban would cost up to 40,000 jobs as claimed by Schreiber’s group.

“In fact, the sad reality is that one slot machine can ruin the lives of at least 10 families,” the ministry said in a statement.

Tamas Boros, a political analyst at Policy Solutions in Budapest, said the changes would likely increase state control over gambling in Hungary, putting it under the auspices of Szerencsej­atek, the stateowned gambling company, which has a monopoly on lotteries, scratch-off tickets and sports betting.

“The state is trying to centralize gambling activities and make all gambling revenues flow in to Szerencsej­atek,” Boros said.

Lazar said the government was also planning to implement tougher conditions for opening a casino in Hungary.

Boros charges that the plan could lead to the establishm­ent of state-owned casinos.

 ??  ?? BELA SZANDELSZK­Y/The Associated Press A man inserts a bill into a roulette slot machine in a gambling hall in Budapest. Hungary’s ban on slot machines has taken the country’s gambling industry by surprise. On Tuesday, just over 24 hours after the...
BELA SZANDELSZK­Y/The Associated Press A man inserts a bill into a roulette slot machine in a gambling hall in Budapest. Hungary’s ban on slot machines has taken the country’s gambling industry by surprise. On Tuesday, just over 24 hours after the...

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