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Online gambling addiction inquiry reveals disturbing stories

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For Mark Kempster, it all came to a head on AFL Grand Final day in 2020.

“I went to the pub and lost a couple of thousands of dollars gambling, and I was so angry and upset I decided to drink my sorrows away,” he says.

“I passed out at a friend’s house and the next day when I got home, my partner Maddy used her intuition and checked my bank accounts, and the truth came out.”

The truth was that Mark was in the grips of a seven-year addiction to online gambling.

He bet obsessively on sports matches and horseracing on his mobile phone, in a secret habit that cost his family more than $100,000.

“It took over my life and I became a shell of the person I was before,” Mark reflects.

“I was angry and insecure because of the amount of money I was gambling – it was just so easy to lose huge amounts of money within just a couple of minutes.”

Ironically, Mark was working for an online betting company for some of that period. By the time his compulsive gambling was discovered, he had accrued significant debts and alienated friends and relatives with his secretive behavior.

A man in a hat and glasses stands in the sunshine at a racetrack
Mark Kempster says the guilt and secrecy of his gambling habit took a big toll.(Supplied: Mark Kempster)

Now 34, Mark has been able to rebuild his life by going cold turkey on gambling for almost two years.

It has not been easy, given the visibility of gambling ads and continuing contact from betting companies trying to lure him back.

He credits the unwavering support of Maddy and his friends and family.

“As far as our relationship goes, it almost broke Mark and me,” Maddy says.

“[Gambling addiction] has a massive, massive impact, and we’re certainly not the only ones experiencing it — it’s tearing families apart.”

A man and a woman smile at the camera while sitting outside
Mark Kempster says he’ll be forever grateful to partner Maddy for sticking by him.(Supplied: Mark Kempster)

Mark Kempster is one of several former gambling addicts who have made impassioned appeals to a parliamentary inquiry investigating the impact of online gambling on Australian communities, and whether enough is being done to protect people from a potentially damaging product.

His three-page submission drips with disdain for an industry he believes is profiting from getting young people hooked on a harmful habit.

“Gambling is a predatory industry, and they prey on and profit from the most vulnerable people in society,” he says.

“They lack any duty of care to the Australian public, and I think the government’s been happy to turn a blind eye as long as they’re making tax revenue off these companies.”

A wide shot of men sitting at a dark bar with large TV screens showing horse-racing in the background.
Betting remains a popular pastime at bars and clubs across Australia.(ABC News: Hamish Harty)

‘Weight of evidence’

For a long time, Australia has gambled more than any other nation, spending about $25 billion a year on pokies, casinos, sports betting, animal racing and lotteries.

Gambling is enshrined in the nation’s popular culture via the tradition of two-up, the triumphs of Phar Lap, and the image of the lovable larrikin having a punt.

Despite that, research shows only about 35 percent of Australians gamble in an average month, with a large portion of these purchasing lottery tickets.

A close up on a hand holding a mobile phone with two betting company brands visible on the screen.
Mobile phone betting apps have fueled a sharp increase in online gambling expenditure.(ABC News: Jessica Hayes)

But it is the new generation of alluringly convenient phone apps that has revolutionized the industry and alarmed many in the community.

Experts say the rapid increase in mobile phone betting — which has led to Australians gambling 20 percent more online than any other nation — has been driven by aggressive advertising and pandemic lockdowns.

A bar graph showing Australia has the biggest online gambling spend in the world.
Australians on average gamble 20 percent more online than any other nation.(ABC News: Sharon Gordon)

Rebecca Jenkinson, from the Australian Gambling Research Centre, says while conventional forms of gambling have plateaued or decreased slightly, online betting has bucked the trend.

“All of the data shows an increase in online gambling during the COVID pandemic, and those increases have been sustained,” Dr Jenkinson says.

“We had expected that levels would drop off once people were back at work and socializing again, but that didn’t happen.

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