
Monday night’s ABC Four Corners’ investigation highlighted major issues with the regulation of online gambling in Australia.
Regulators are responsible for safeguarding the public from serious gambling harms. However, the investigation alleged a revolving door between regulators and industry, the ongoing problems of donations to politicians and conflicts of interest of regulators.
At best, weak regulation of gambling means operators’ unethical, predatory practices are overlooked. This in turn can amplify gambling harms.
It’s well known how harmful gambling can be but my recent research shows these harms, including suicide, have been systematically underreported.
Australians are the worst gamblers
Australians are the biggest (or worst) gamblers in the world per capita. And the problem appears to be getting worse: we recorded the largest gambling losses ever in 2024 (A$32 billion).
Read more: The biggest losers: how Australians became the world's most enthusiastic gamblers
The gambling ecosystem benefits greatly from addicted consumers to sustain and grow its revenue streams.
Operators often promote and provide inducements to their most vulnerable customers.
The pokie problem
Electronic gaming machines (colloquially known as pokies) are the most harmful form of gambling in Australia.
It has been more than 15 years since the Australian government’s Productivity Commission recommended mandatory pre-commitment for pokies.
These pre-commitment systems would require users to register for an account linked to a gambling card, which would record a limit of how much they are prepared to lose.
Despite the Productivity Commission’s recommendation, no jurisdiction in Australia operates a pre-commitment system.
This is despite repeated promises from state governments, including Tasmania, Victoria and New South Wales.
Gambling harms tend to publicly emerge when there is a paper trail, such as a wagering account statement. But when people use pokies, there is no paper trail because few venues require account registrations.
The industry has successfully, and fiercely, resisted a pre-comittment system for pokies gambling.
While gambling operators claim to adhere to codes of conduct that should protect their patrons from harm, the reality is a different story.
The problem may be worse than we thought
We’ve only recently begun to understand the extent and range of harms linked to gambling, including suicide.
Our 2023 study, using the best available data, found at least 4.2% of all Victorian suicides in 2009–16 were gambling related. This figure includes 184 people where death investigators documented evidence of direct gambling harm and 17 others who experienced gambling harm via their partners.
Yet these figures are likely to be an underestimate, given the lack of systematic investigation. Gambling harm is almost certainly underreported.
Our new research outlines the systems, practices and pathways through which the gambling ecosystem drives harm, including suicidality (suicidal thoughts, plans or attempts) and suicide.
The gambling ecosystem – entities that derive financial benefits from gambling, including gambling operators, sporting leagues and broadcasters – use the “responsible gambling” trope to argue “flawed consumers” are responsible for gambling harm.
This generates stigma and shame by implying the blame for gambling harm is so-called “problem gamblers”, not the products they use.
Shame and stigma are known mechanisms in the relationship between gambling and suicide.
Yet our current gambling arrangements often stigmatise those struggling with gambling issues, distracting from the practices of the commercial entities that drive the harm.
Our research suggests several ways governments can counteract these drivers.
This includes addressing the cosy relationship between parliament and industry, banning political donations from betting companies, ensuring people who gamble have access to systems to help them limit losses, and regulators that are resourced to enforce duty of care obligations.
Our leaders need to act
Australia’s gambling ecosystem benefits from the fragmentation of oversight, with the states currently charged with regulating poker machines.
The federal government accepts responsibility for online wagering but it does not regulate it.
Shifting responsibility between federal and state governments on gambling needs to stop. We need a national regulator that is properly resourced to monitor the practices of all gambling operators.
It has been more than two years since the Australian government’s Parliamentary Committee into online gambling harm released its 31 recommendations to prevent harms.
Convention dictates government should respond within six months. As MP Andrew Wilkie suggested in the Four Corners program, government inaction starts to look a lot like a protection racket for the gambling industry.
The severity of harms we now know are linked to gambling should compel the government to enact serious reforms. We know gambling, like tobacco, is leading to preventable deaths.
Waiting to adopt key recommendations is costing lives.
If this article has raised issues for you, or if you’re concerned about someone you know, call Lifeline on 13 11 14.
This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Angela Rintoul, The University of Melbourne
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Angela Rintoul holds a postdoctoral fellowship funded by Suicide Prevention Australia. In the past she has received funding from the Victoria Responsible Gambling Foundation, which was supported by allocations from the Community Support Fund, a government administered trust fund constituted from direct taxes on electronic gaming machines (EGMs) in hotels. She has also received funding from the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust and ANROWS. She is a member of the WHO meeting on gambling and received travel funding from the Turkish Green Crescent Society and consultancy funding from WHO. She has been paid honoraria to review grants by the British Academic Forum for the Study of Gambling, administered via Gambling Research Exchange Ontario, funded by regulatory settlements from gambling companies that have breached the law. Angela is a member of the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP), and co-chair of the IASP social and commercial determinants of health special interest group, and a member of Suicide Prevention Australia.