The government's announcement creates a hostile environment and will boost black-market operators at the expense of legitimate players, say industry insiders
On Tuesday, during the 50th GST Council meeting, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced that online gaming, casinos and horse racing will be taxed at a uniform rate of 28 percent. The tax will be applicable on the face value of bets placed (in case of online gaming and horse racing) and chips purchased (for casinos), with no distinction between games of skill and chance.
“The GST Council’s intention is not to hurt the online gaming industry or states with casinos. A few states shared their concerns. But there is a moral question: Can we encourage them more than essential goods? I am proud to say that the GST Council discussed and understood the matter deeply and took a decision which had been pending for 2-3 years. The issue is very complex,” Sitharaman said.
As expected, the industry is disappointed with this decision. Shares of digital gaming and esports company Nazara Technologies dropped by over 14 percent and Delta Corp’s shares fell by 10 percent after this announcement.
Online gaming companies clocked a turnover of Rs 13,500 crore in 2022, as per a report by Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry and EY (April 2023). There were over 400 million online gamers in India, of which around 90-100 million played frequently. Real money gaming comprised 77 percent of the segment revenues. As per the report, the online gaming sector is expected to report a total revenue of Rs 16,700 crore in 2023 and Rs 23,100 crore in 2025, gross of taxes.
Also read: Dissecting India's gaming pie