Two Plus Two Newer Archives  

Go Back   Two Plus Two Newer Archives > General Poker Discussion > Poker Legislation
FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #21  
Old 11-25-2007, 06:11 PM
Richas Richas is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: On the learning curve
Posts: 484
Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

The UK system is 15% of the sites gross profit to the taxman and no income tax. Even this is relatively unattractive to major sites (bookmakers have the same deal).

Someone said gambling should be treated as Income for Tax, many other places don't see it this way they take the money from the site and ignore the punter,

Shifting the tax with no increased rake to the site might help winning players and make little difference to losing players but it would hurt the sites at 50%, shoot 15% hurts. Plus it would never be competitive internationally and differentiated rakes/tax by nationality could not be WTO compliant.

IMHO a bit of a no hoper - go for a UK system and make clear the 15% of gross is more than the income tax on the few winers.
Reply With Quote
  #22  
Old 11-27-2007, 10:40 AM
Lottery Larry Lottery Larry is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Home Poker in da HOOWWSSS!
Posts: 6,198
Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

"but I would assume the poker player would be ineligible for any normal deductions. "

If they are a professional gambler, that isn't true. The gross wins/gross deducted losses is only for casual gamblers.

"Why should the rich have to pay a higher percentage of their income? "

They can afford to do so, having more disposable income...and since they most likely didn't earn it all by themselves, I don't have a lot of sympathy.
Reply With Quote
  #23  
Old 11-27-2007, 12:05 PM
Lottery Larry Lottery Larry is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Home Poker in da HOOWWSSS!
Posts: 6,198
Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
So you want to FURTHER encourage the IRS to treat gross session wins as if they are not affected by gross losses?

Bad idea imo

[/ QUOTE ]

How so? If you play terrible poker, losing every hand, you'll pay zero tax. That would mean you only pay tax when you win.

Shoot, I've spent 4 years grinding limits where I more often than not pay 5% rake and yet I make money. Therefore, I don't see how paying the same 5% and then NOT paying income tax on top of that would be a bad deal for me.

[/ QUOTE ]

Mainly because, once implemented, sin taxes have NEVER, in my experience, been removed or had the rates reduced. Once you open the gate, the greed factor sets in. Look at cigarette taxes, liquor and other such items.

I don't know what rake the online sites are getting now, but I can't see them taking too much of a cut. Even though they'd probably make more money overall, going uncapped... wouldn't they be more likely to just tack on the gov't tax?

If you could get the sites and the gov't to agree to 'swap out' part of the rake as income tax, then maybe the effect wouldn't be too severe. But remember, paying a smaller rate on a larger pile of money is how we build billion-dollar casinos.


Let's look at some numbers-

I) You play two limit poker sessions $5/10 5% rake capped at $6. Each play lasts 1 hour. Online, we'll give you 6 winning pots per session - the rest, you fold or lost at some stage.

Winning pots, each session: $136, $80, $250, $101, $57 and $105 ($700 gross, after the rake of $29 taken out)

Losses: Session one, you lost a total of $450 on the other pots

Session two, you lost a total of $930


<u>CURRENT SYSTEM: </u> You report a $250 session and a -$230 session, for a gross win of 1bb per hour. What is the cost, including US income tax at 25%?

Tax: Approximately $5
Total cost of playing: $63 ($58 in rake, $5 in income tax)
Net win: $15

<u>YOUR SYSTEM </u> 5% uncapped rake, no income tax added on.
Now, your rake at each session is $36, total $72 raked:

Rake to casino $36 (a $22 loss)
Rake to US gov't $36 (an extra $31 in tax)

Your first session, you won $243. Your second session, you lost $237

Total cost to player: $72 (or almost 12% MORE)
Net win: $6 (60% less)

Now, if your goal is to pay more, make less, have the cardroom make 38% less.... and give the US government a relative windfall, then you're goot.

II) Let's check a bigger winning streak for you. You win an additional $206 pot in the second session.

Current- You have a $250 win and a -$30 loss
Tax: $55
Rake: $64
Total cost: $119


Your system- You have a $250 win and a -$41 loss
Tax rake $41
Site Rake $41
Total cost $82


You had to take down an extra 20bb pot every two hours in order to reduced your cost by $37. The government makes less, the site makes less.





Without doing the numbers, the only way for the site to make more money under your system is off of the losing players. The US government will also make more than they normally would.... so the losing players are going to lose MORE with an uncapped rake than they save, unless they lose every single hand.
If the losing players are losing more... how long will they be around to prop up your extra 20bb pot? Not to mention feeding all of your other pots.

Losing players don't end up paying extra taxes under the current system unless they have HUGE amounts bet (and then they pay by having a higher tax bracket).
Reply With Quote
  #24  
Old 11-27-2007, 12:30 PM
Seb86 Seb86 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 215
Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
So you want to FURTHER encourage the IRS to treat gross session wins as if they are not affected by gross losses?

Bad idea imo

[/ QUOTE ]

How so? If you play terrible poker, losing every hand, you'll pay zero tax. That would mean you only pay tax when you win.

Shoot, I've spent 4 years grinding limits where I more often than not pay 5% rake and yet I make money. Therefore, I don't see how paying the same 5% and then NOT paying income tax on top of that would be a bad deal for me.


[ QUOTE ]

I don't know of any state that taxes gambling in the way you describe. Typically, the tax would come in the form of a percentage of the casino's win (or the casino's total rake in the case of poker), or the casino's corporate profits. The consumer never actually "sees" the tax. I don't know why it would be any different for internet gambling.

[/ QUOTE ]

But the consumer still needs to pay income tax. The entity that is affected the most is the poker site, since the rake they charge will be half as much as they received from American players before.

[/ QUOTE ]

Dont try to think ever again.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:40 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.