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Australia's Gamble: Are Anti-Gambling Laws Working?

  • Written by: The Times

Are Australian gambling laws effective

Australia has spent years tightening gambling laws in an effort to reduce harm.

Overseas gambling websites are blocked from legally offering many services to Australians without a licence. Free-to-air television faces restrictions on gambling advertising during live sport. Online operators must comply with strict licensing rules, and regulators have powers to investigate illegal operators.

Yet despite these measures, gambling remains almost impossible to avoid.

Turn on a football match and licensed betting companies are prominent sponsors. Sporting broadcasts feature odds, promotions and betting brands before and after games. Stadium signage, team sponsorships and online advertising continue to place wagering in front of millions of Australians.

The law draws an important distinction. It aims to keep illegal overseas operators out of the Australian market while allowing licensed Australian businesses to operate under regulation. The intention is to protect consumers by steering them towards operators that comply with Australian law.

Whether that objective has reduced gambling harm is another question.

Community organisations, counselling services and gambling reform advocates continue to report the devastating consequences of problem gambling. Financial hardship, relationship breakdowns, mental health issues and family stress remain common themes among those seeking help.

Poker machines continue to generate billions of dollars each year, particularly in clubs and hotels. Sports betting has expanded rapidly through mobile apps, allowing wagers to be placed almost anywhere and at almost any time.

Some forms of in-play betting are prohibited online in Australia because governments believe continuous betting during a match increases gambling harm. However, technology and offshore operators continue to challenge regulators, and determined gamblers can often find ways around restrictions despite enforcement efforts.

Critics argue Australia has created a contradiction.

Governments regulate gambling heavily while collecting substantial taxation revenue from licensed operators. Sporting organisations depend on sponsorship income from betting companies. Television networks benefit from advertising revenue. Racing industries rely on wagering turnover to support prize money and operations.

In other words, gambling has become woven into significant parts of Australia's sporting and entertainment economy.

Supporters of the current system argue that prohibition rarely works. They say a regulated market with consumer protections, responsible gambling tools and licensed operators is preferable to driving gamblers towards illegal offshore websites where there are few safeguards.

Those calling for stronger reform see it differently. They argue advertising normalises gambling for young Australians, particularly through sport. They question whether children should grow up recognising betting brands as readily as sporting teams.

The debate is no longer simply about gambling itself. It is about how much gambling advertising Australians are willing to accept in everyday life.

Can governments meaningfully reduce gambling harm while the industry remains a major advertiser, taxpayer and sponsor of Australian sport?

That question sits at the centre of Australia's gambling debate.

Current laws have undoubtedly changed the way gambling is regulated. Whether they have significantly reduced its social impact remains far less certain.

As technology evolves and betting becomes even more accessible through smartphones and digital platforms, policymakers will continue to face a difficult balancing act between consumer freedom, industry interests and protecting vulnerable Australians.

For now, Australia remains one of the world's most enthusiastic gambling nations—and one of the countries still searching for the right balance between regulation and reality.

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