THE TOTALISATOR
MACHINE NOT PAYING ON ENGLISH | COURSES
RETURNS YERY SMALL Bankruptcy faces the English totalisator from which so much was expected when it was inaugurated the season before last. Among the benefits which it was hoped would follow from its installation were increased prizes. To-day, it is not paying its way on a commercial basis. The sports editor of the "Daily Mail" views the future of the totalisator with the greatest concern. The public, he says, is very appreciative when the machine is available, and the gross turnover of £4,000,000 in 1931 is £1,000,000 in excess of 1930. It is doubtful, however, whether 1932 will show a similar increase. The Betting Control Board has faced its gigantic task admir/ably, in spite of the necessity for supplanting the all-electric machines with cheaper substitutes. Nevertheless, the returns are too small compared with the whole turnover. Betting in Britain was estimated during examination of the betting tax prospects in 1932 at £200,000,000 a year, and, even allowing for the changing habits of the people, it is still estimated at £100,000,000. Moreover, 80 per cent. of betting is transacted outside the racecourses. The Control Board's revenue of £400,000 a year, based on 10 per cent. of the turnover, covers operating and administrative costs, but is not sufficient for interest, eapital and depreciation. If progress does not accelerate the "tote" will be bankrupt. One way of restoration would be to iristal the machine on all the 43 greyhound race tracks. Their attendances aggregate 20,000,000 a year. which is three times the attendances on twice as many racecourses. The
totalisator betting on them is nearly three times that on horse courses, and will reach £12,000.000 in 1932 n spite of the fact that only a few totalisators are equipped with all electric apparatus. Stay-at-home bettors might be afforded "tote" facilities which would involve the legislation of betting offices in the cities and towns. To this there would be bitter opposition though it is only another step on the road to the recognition of betting following that taken when the "tote" was legalised. The opening of ready-money offices would create a vast new betting puhi c; it would merely regulate the methods by v/hich men and women 'llegally pass betting slips to milkmen a'nd bookmakers' agents in 100 different guises.
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Bibliographic details
Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 1, Issue 119, 12 January 1932, Page 6
Word Count
384THE TOTALISATOR Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 1, Issue 119, 12 January 1932, Page 6
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