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Friday, April 19, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

No More State Aid for Public Greek Casinos

(CN) - The European Commission told Greece it can no longer subsidize state-run casino and directed the gambling meccas to return about 10 years' worth of improperly allocated aid.

The order wraps up an investigation, initiated by a 2009 complaint, into state aid for Greek casinos.

Until now, Greek law had different regulations for admissions to state-owned and private casinos. Both are required to charge 80 percent tax.

For admission to a public casino, a person would pay about $1.75, plus about $7 in taxes. But private casinos were required to charge $4.30 admission, plus $17.25 in taxes.

This distorts competition and trade, the EU's executive body said, while also affecting trade, as many casino operators are international hotel groups.

The policy furthermore goes against a stated objective of discouraging gambling, as many low-priced state casinos neighbor large cities.

The commission ordered state-owned casinos to pay back the unfair subsidy, going back 10 years before the original complaint to 1999.

Publicly funded casinos in Greece may be compared with state-run gambling in the United States, such as lotteries.

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