
A legislative proposal to impose a 20 percent national levy on gross online gambling revenue in South Africa has drawn sharp criticism from industry stakeholders and legal experts.
Opponents argue that the measure conflicts with the constitution and could have detrimental effects on the regulated market.
Arguments Against Centralization
The Free Market Foundation described the measure as a naked revenue grab that threatens the existence of the legal gambling market. Experts warn that placing excessive financial pressure on licensed operators could push players toward the unlicensed and illegal market which offers fewer consumer protections.
Ayanda Zulu, a political studies graduate from the University of Pretoria in South Africa and intern at the Free Market Foundation, published an article calling the plan a bizarre proposal that should not proceed. He pointed to the National Gambling Act which delegates primary regulatory authority to the provinces rather than the national government.
“This means that a national tax is unconstitutional because its centralisation of fiscal responsibility ignores clear jurisdictional boundaries and the limits placed on the national government,” Zulu argued.
Treasury Justification and Revenue Targets
The National Treasury draft paper proposes layering the 20 percent national levy on top of existing provincial taxes which range between 5 percent and 7 percent. The department justifies the higher rate by noting that land based casinos contribute jobs and infrastructure while online gambling offers fewer tangible economic benefits.
The Treasury estimates that at current levels the tax would generate over 10 billion rand in additional revenue. However, the department insists the primary objective is to discourage problem gambling rather than simply raising funds. The levy would apply to gross gambling revenue which covers turnover minus winnings paid to players.


