Major bank, Westpac has responded to the ongoing scourge of problem gambling with a punitive measure for customers using its credit cards for online gambling transactions<\/p>\n
The bank has decided to charge higher interest on what it describes as \u201cquasi cash\u201d <\/em>credit card payments, including transactions for Lotto, TAB and other online gambling services.<\/p>\n
The bank levies a 22.95% interest for \u2018cash advances\u2019<\/em> on its Hotpoints Mastercard and has stated that from November 30\u200b, all payments to gambling accounts, for cryptocurrency purchases will be categorised as cash advances. Assuming the cardholder does not clear their balance by their monthly payment date; all regular purchases performed with Westpac’s standard Mastercard will incur interest of 20.95\u200b%.<\/p>\n
\u201cI think the move to ban credit cards would be a good one,\u201d<\/em> she asserted.<\/p>\n
Froude mentioned that institutions like Westpac have a lot more work to do in the fight to empower gambling addicts with the tools to help themselves. She pointed to Kiwibank, which in April announced that it would offer voluntary credit card gambling blocks<\/a> to problem gamblers. This is to help them stop gambling with borrowed funds and so far, 127 customers have requested the block, representing an average of $13\u00a0000 saved in gambling spend saved per year.<\/p>\n