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We are all paying the price for cheap alcohol

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Published Date: 21 December 2007
ALCOHOL Focus Scotland believes urgent government action is required to address the ridiculously low price of alcohol.
Once again, in the run-up to Christmas and New Year, supermarkets are promoting a "booze bonanza" where beer is cheaper than water.

Tesco is offering 60 440ml cans of lager for £20 – just 33p per can – and the most prominent image on the home page
of the Asda website is a special offer of three bottles of wine for £10 and two bottles of spirits for £18.

Such promotions are blatantly designed to sell more alcohol.

Alcohol is not an ordinary commodity like tins of soup or loaves of bread. It is a drug which causes increasing harm in our communities. Is it ethical to promote a product so cheaply which has the potential to wreck lives?

The vast majority of alcohol sold for drinking at home is through just six supermarket chains. Supermarkets

need to stop hiding behind arguments that they are responsible merely because they are committed to preventing under-age sales and have signed up to voluntary codes of practice.

The effect of price on alcohol consumption is one of the most researched areas of alcohol policy. The evidence from many international studies is that an overall price increase leads to a reduction in sales, in turn, leading to a reduction in alcohol-related harm. Alcohol overall is now 62 per cent more affordable than in 1980. We are most concerned about drinks that are designed to be drunk quickly or that are particularly strong, such as white ciders.

We are not calling for blanket tax increases but rather additional tariffs on some types of products and an end to the common supermarket practice of below cost sales. Ireland has successful experience of both.

When it removed the tax advantage on cider compared with beer, there was an almost immediate downturn in cider sales. A similar approach could be taken in the UK.

Some say there's no reason why responsible drinkers should be prevented from getting a "bargain". But harmful alcohol use is rarely an individual problem – the drinker's behaviour impacts on their children, partner, friends, colleagues and society as a whole.

Others argue that alcohol is cheaper in countries such as Spain or Italy, yet they don't experience the same problems of drunkenness as us. This must be considered in the context of our very different drinking cultures.

The low cost and widespread availability of alcohol in the UK is set against a long-standing culture of social acceptability of drunkenness.

We support Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill's intention to end cheap price promotions.

At a cost of over £1 billion per year and rising, Scotland can no longer afford to pay such a high price for our drinking culture.

Jack Law is the chief executive of Alcohol Focus Scotland



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 21 December 2007 8:15 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Alcohol & binge drinking
 
1

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 21/12/2007 11:55:57
Oh for Christ's Sake!!

Alcohol is NOT cheap in this country. If anything, the price needs to drop.

Scotland does not have a "binge drinking" culture.

Alcohol focus are simply the drinkers' equivalent of ASH. They will not rest until everyone is teetotal.

For goodness sake ignore them. Scotsman Group, please stop giving these idiots a platform.
2

bluehead,

edinburgh 21/12/2007 13:01:41
people drink for many reasons,so if you stop them drinking booze they will find other things to do that would be even worse,perhaps the groaners and moaners
should try a drink or two,at least it would show that they are human----hic-hic cheers
3

Unimpressed one,

21/12/2007 13:21:18
#1, Well said, but remember The Scotsman gives column inches to many idiotic minority pressure groups, such as Friends of the Earth and WWF who would dearly love to ban our way of life and 'convince' us to follow them.
4

barra,

Edinburgh 21/12/2007 16:05:44
Instead of making alcohol dearer as has been suggested to stop youngsters binge drinking why not just make them pay their share of council tax and then they may not be able to afford drink.
5

Road Raga,

EDINBURGH 21/12/2007 21:33:36
According to a recent article I read, in real terms, Beer is actually MUCH more expensive today than the 1950s.
Someone has got it wrong somewhere down the line methinks.
6

sceptic,

01/01/2008 15:11:26
"The low cost and widespread availability of alcohol in the UK"
Utter nonsense! I bring all my booze from France because I object to the high prices here!
7

drew 33,

01/01/2008 15:24:46
ALCOHOL Focus Scotland is guilty of the worst bingeing encouraged by this Labour government - binge taxation.

 

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