When the gambling industry realised women were potential customers, it reeled them in

The Big Issue
 
When the gambling industry realised women were potential customers, it reeled them in
Wild Casino

These big changes to how we gamble have effectively opened up the industry to women, who are now able to place bets while still meeting their caring responsibilities and feeling safe. But with gambling comes gambling addictions – in fact nearly 80 per cent of the industry’s Gross Gambling Yield (a metric for how much money gambling operators keep after they have paid winnings) comes from just 10 per cent of customers.

The gambling charity Gordon Moody has seen a 132 per cent annual increase of women seeking help. Some addiction counsellors report a 300 per cent rise in women reaching out for support since the Covid-19 pandemic began.

At Class, our research with Clean Up Gambling has led us to the conclusion that problematic gambling, and the explosion of gambling addictions in women, is now a major public health crisis. 

In fact we found that, for women, there was often no prior interest in betting or a history of addiction before their gambling spiralled out of control. And the time it took our female participants to become hooked astonished us: one participant said she was hooked just two weeks after placing her first bet.

Our research participant Jess told us about a game she had become addicted to: “Once I start I physically can’t stop playing until I run out of money. It’s all the lights and colours that entice you in, like, I’ve literally played it for so long that when I try to sleep I can still see the stars rolling in my eyes.”

The gambling industry has created a number of interventions for customers whose gambling has become a problem. But we found that any good done by these safeguards is completely wiped out by the fact that the industry bombards customers with notifications, text messages, free gifts and offers in order to keep them gambling.

Women are pampered by the industry, and encouraged to see the act of gambling as becoming part of a glamorous community. Or as Samantha, one of our research participants, put it: “They would send me a massive gift hamper at Christmas and on my birthday, cashback when I deposited after a loss. They even sent me a £500 Radley voucher. They would do everything to draw me in, they were taking thousands of pounds of me every month and they wanted to keep it that way. The gifts were just bribes.”

The experiences of these women, and people with gambling addictions in general, are symptoms of a long-term government failure to rein in this predatory industry.

In 2005, the New Labour government introduced the Gambling Act, which essentially made a Faustian pact with operators to relax regulations in exchange for operators ending or not participating in tax avoidance.

But the gambling industry did not keep up its part of the bargain, offshoring most of the UK-based activity to Gibraltar, the Isle of Man, Malta or Jersey.

Meanwhile it has been targeting vulnerable people and extracting huge sums of money from them with very little oversight. Our research suggests that when the gambling industry realised that women were potential customers, its response was to reel them in, rather than taking measures to protect their welfare.

In fact, such is the lack of accountability and transparency in the gambling industry that we struggled to get any data at all for our report. Only four months into our five-month research process did we finally get hold of quantitative data we could use.

The government has yet again delayed a long-awaited white paper on gambling laws which was supposed to be released in 2020. It was rescheduled for this month but has been pushed back again to May 2022. This is simply unacceptable when there are thousands of people sinking into debt at the hands of this out-of-control industry.

There needs to be immediate, major reform to the gambling industry, for the sake of the people it targets, and their children.