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  #11  
Old 11-25-2007, 02:52 AM
KEW KEW is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

Three problems..

1..IRS will never do away with income taxes on gambling winning..If if they taxes every pot...Income taxes will still be paid by the winners..Plus your scheme ignores FICA taxes to "Pros"..

2..Sites will not be willing to cut there rake in half..This also infer the 2.5% would be on behalf of the players the sites would still be responsible for normal corporate profit taxes..Nor will foreign sites be willing to go along with it..

3..A uncapped 2.5% would bankrupt the games...That's 2.5% of EVERY pot leaving the game..At an avg of 60 hands per hours what's left in front of the players..This does not even take into consideration the "normal" house rake...
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  #12  
Old 11-25-2007, 08:33 AM
ericicecream ericicecream is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]
you can large number this, and get an average number of pots that are won by americans. Lets say 80%, then the poker site is paying 2% rake and collecting 3% rake for itself.

Irregardless of who actually wins the pot.

So if they want to make 5%, they up their rake to 7% rake and pay the 2.5% to USG on american pots which is 2 percent if 80% of players are american, and keep 5%.

So now everyone is taxed and the poker site makes its desired rate.

[/ QUOTE ]


...and 90% of the winning players become losing players due to the increased rake
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  #13  
Old 11-25-2007, 09:46 AM
PokrLikeItsProse PokrLikeItsProse is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

The U.S. government would be better off requiring poker rooms to determine taxable income for each user who makes over $500 in the year and forwarding that data to the IRS.
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  #14  
Old 11-25-2007, 11:11 AM
oldbookguy oldbookguy is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?


What you are suggesting is basically an excise tax?

Or would this replace any income tax the site may owe the U.S. government.

Additionally, the rake you propose would require determing what portion of the total rake came from U.S. players and non U. S. players, the government would not be entitled to the latter.

There are excise taxes in place already, .25% (from legal wagering, 2% from illegal wagering), why should this be any different?

There is a House Bill that deals with this, a simple 2% excise tax of deposits made from the U. S., no by the game / hand excise tax / rake. Thios would be much simplier and easier for all to enforce and accept.

BTW, the 2% proposed has a claus that it NOT be deducted from the deposit credited to the players account as well.

obg
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  #15  
Old 11-25-2007, 12:52 PM
bluefall bluefall is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]
Three problems..

1..IRS will never do away with income taxes on gambling winning..If if they taxes every pot...Income taxes will still be paid by the winners..Plus your scheme ignores FICA taxes to "Pros"..

2..Sites will not be willing to cut there rake in half..This also infer the 2.5% would be on behalf of the players the sites would still be responsible for normal corporate profit taxes..Nor will foreign sites be willing to go along with it..

3..A uncapped 2.5% would bankrupt the games...That's 2.5% of EVERY pot leaving the game..At an avg of 60 hands per hours what's left in front of the players..This does not even take into consideration the "normal" house rake...

[/ QUOTE ]


It's not a perfect plan I understand. I'm not sure what you said exactly in the first point but we all know the player that wins the pot pays rake. So, the player that wins a pot pays income tax by paying the tax rake....not separately reporting it as income to the IRS in April.

Sites would HAVE to go along with it or they'd be denied access to US players. If they didn't agree to it, guess what, Harrah's or whomever would certainly pop in and get a site up and running to take advantage of the opening. By reducing the amount the site earns per hand won by a US player, the site is essentially taxed. Therefore, no additional corporate tax would be instituted. A lot of industries are taxed differently so it's not crazy to think that the online poker industry can't have a separate tax code.

Plus the policy makers should be willing to agree to any plan that maximizes their tax. Without the rake, poker is a zero sum game. The only way to guarantee taxes are taken is to break it down to the pot level or just tax the site, since they're the only one guaranteed to make money.

Point 3 has merit. But, a full 5% is already charged in all micro games. They still run, though somewhat due to the constant influx of new players or bad players willing to reload. The tax would not need to be a full 2.5% though. Maybe 1% tax, 1% to site....or whatever ratios work. Capping the site's rake. I dunno.

Somebody else commented on the international community and their unwillingness to go along with this plan. Why would they care? Only American players pay the tax. What do I care if Canadians don't pay any tax on gambling winnings?

I've had the opportunity to think about this for a long time I've probably convinced myself it's a good option. It seems like a good idea to present things to Congress in more than just the standard way. Oh well.
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  #16  
Old 11-25-2007, 01:07 PM
Tuff_Fish Tuff_Fish is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

Good out of the box thinking Bluefall.

IF there were no other taxes involved, the player walked away with 100% of whatever he cashed out, the poker room walked away with 100% of their profits, then this is something that merits serious consideration.

BTW, doesn't the UK do something similar? My understanding is that gambling winnings are not taxed at the player level.

Keep thinking, and do some math.

Go on Poker Scout here and try to figure out how much the various goverment entities are missing out on this very minute. This assumes that the various gov entities share in the loot. 2 1/2 % is plenty, but the gov is always hungry. We would have to insure any such tax law was ironclad and the thieves in gov don't start a new tax on us on top of the 2 1/2%. An almost impossible task BTW.

Good job.

Tuff
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  #17  
Old 11-25-2007, 01:21 PM
NickMPK NickMPK is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]

[ 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 ]

So you are suggesting that internet gambling winnings be exempted from income tax? This is never going to happen, nor should it. Gambling winnings (at least net winnings) are income. To not tax them on the same scale as wages would be unfair to everyone who has a real job.
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  #18  
Old 11-25-2007, 01:49 PM
bluefall bluefall is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]

[ 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 ]

So you are suggesting that internet gambling winnings be exempted from income tax? This is never going to happen, nor should it. Gambling winnings (at least net winnings) are income. To not tax them on the same scale as wages would be unfair to everyone who has a real job.

[/ QUOTE ]

Everything in the tax code already is unfair to somebody. Why should the rich have to pay a higher percentage of their income? Why are session winnings reported as income but losses as deductions? That's unfair to poker players already.

How much are poker players contributing as tax now? $500 million? What about the $$ the IRS loses when people claim the maximum deduction? I have no idea what either value could possibly be. But let's assume the IRS nets more with this method than they do by the current standard. Why would Congress not agree to a system that nets more tax, regardless of how fair it "seems" to be to the regular worker?

I never thought this far ahead but I would assume the poker player would be ineligible for any normal deductions. Maybe a tax accountant can offer their insight.
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  #19  
Old 11-25-2007, 02:13 PM
NickMPK NickMPK is offline
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Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]


How much are poker players contributing as tax now? $500 million? What about the $$ the IRS loses when people claim the maximum deduction? I have no idea what either value could possibly be. But let's assume the IRS nets more with this method than they do by the current standard. Why would Congress not agree to a system that nets more tax, regardless of how fair it "seems" to be to the regular worker?


[/ QUOTE ]

Well, the system that would net the most taxes would be to tax the sites and have gambling winnings be reportable as income (or tax each pot and have gambling winnings reportable as income). Why wouldn't Congress just do this?

Congress is never going to exempt gambling winnings from the income tax. Never. Such a proposal will lose 90% of the politicians who already support online gambling. You also add additional complication to the tax code, which no one wants (since you are now distinguishing online gambling from land-based gambling).

To find a realistic potential system of taxation for poker sites, you might want to consider looking into how gambling operators are currently taxed at the state level.
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  #20  
Old 11-25-2007, 05:29 PM
DeadMoneyDad DeadMoneyDad is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 814
Default Re: Regulating online poker and sites by \"taxing\" the rake?

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Three problems..

1..IRS will never do away with income taxes on gambling winning..If if they taxes every pot...Income taxes will still be paid by the winners..Plus your scheme ignores FICA taxes to "Pros"..

2..Sites will not be willing to cut there rake in half..This also infer the 2.5% would be on behalf of the players the sites would still be responsible for normal corporate profit taxes..Nor will foreign sites be willing to go along with it..

3..A uncapped 2.5% would bankrupt the games...That's 2.5% of EVERY pot leaving the game..At an avg of 60 hands per hours what's left in front of the players..This does not even take into consideration the "normal" house rake...

[/ QUOTE ]


It's not a perfect plan I understand. I'm not sure what you said exactly in the first point but we all know the player that wins the pot pays rake. So, the player that wins a pot pays income tax by paying the tax rake....not separately reporting it as income to the IRS in April.

Sites would HAVE to go along with it or they'd be denied access to US players. If they didn't agree to it, guess what, Harrah's or whomever would certainly pop in and get a site up and running to take advantage of the opening. By reducing the amount the site earns per hand won by a US player, the site is essentially taxed. Therefore, no additional corporate tax would be instituted. A lot of industries are taxed differently so it's not crazy to think that the online poker industry can't have a separate tax code.

Plus the policy makers should be willing to agree to any plan that maximizes their tax. Without the rake, poker is a zero sum game. The only way to guarantee taxes are taken is to break it down to the pot level or just tax the site, since they're the only one guaranteed to make money.

Point 3 has merit. But, a full 5% is already charged in all micro games. They still run, though somewhat due to the constant influx of new players or bad players willing to reload. The tax would not need to be a full 2.5% though. Maybe 1% tax, 1% to site....or whatever ratios work. Capping the site's rake. I dunno.

Somebody else commented on the international community and their unwillingness to go along with this plan. Why would they care? Only American players pay the tax. What do I care if Canadians don't pay any tax on gambling winnings?

I've had the opportunity to think about this for a long time I've probably convinced myself it's a good option. It seems like a good idea to present things to Congress in more than just the standard way. Oh well.

[/ QUOTE ]


You are asking for too much politically.

To get on-line poker, you want to change on-line poker economics, gambling and corporate tax rates?

Pretty much a dead on arrival suggestion, IMO.

Uncollected on-line poker taxes is estimated at 3 Billion annually already.

The US market is already paying a 5% "excise tax" on deposits, through the UIGEA but collected by e-pass and the like.

Most of the corporate tax is currently uncollected by the US except for any earnings reported by US tax paying "owners".

To regulate the usual course is to require licensing fees to cover the new "costs" to the government.

I too think that any ultimate solution advanced should include a change in income taxes to individual players, and I "like the way you think", but as is this idea is dead politically.


D$D
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