Big beer, bigger prices! |
Minimum prices on beer, wine and spirits don't fix the abuse problems
they're meant to solve, and simply gouge the rest of us.
Bill Tieleman’s 24
Hours Vancouver / The Tyee
column
Tuesday July
28, 2014
By Bill Tieleman
"What
is the point of requiring non-problem drinkers to forego their pleasure or pay
more, for no good in return? And what is the good of taxing problem drinkers
more, if it does not address the harm?"
- Godfrey Robson, International
Center for Alcohol Policies
As the
BC Liberal government scrambles to make its ridiculous "unhappy
hour" slightly less objectionable, the big question remains
unanswered: why have a minimum price on alcohol at all?
The
answer annoys both the government, which loves telling people what to do, as
well as the academics and doctors it listens to. But the reality is that the
minimum prices introduced in British Columbia last month for beer, wine and
spirits don't fix the problems they're intended to solve.
They
only mean that happy hour, when drinks are supposed to be cheaper, get more
expensive.
John
Yap, parliamentary secretary for liquor policy reform, said introducing minimum
booze prices is "modernizing" liquor laws while addressing
"public safety and health" concerns -- that is, to curb alcohol
abuse.
Yet on
Friday, Yap lowered the minimum price on pitchers of beer, but not pints, from
the 25 cents an ounce announced last month to 20 cents an ounce.
Campaign
for Real Ale Society spokesperson Paddy Treavor said in an interview Sunday
that the change doesn't make sense: "They've lowered the price on the
biggest serving size. I don't see how that promotes health and safety. And we
still have the highest priced beer in Canada."
The
minimum pricing also means that independent bars and restaurants with beer
priced lower than the big chains were suddenly forced to jack prices, removing
competitive advantages.
What
seemed like a dumb BC Liberal move
soon looked pretty devious. Some of their biggest financial supporters are
those chains.
Good
intentions can backfire
Regardless,
there is evidence that imposing minimum booze prices and raising the cost
doesn't always work to limit alcohol abuse.
Raul
Caetano, professor of epidemiology at the University of Texas School of Public
Health, said good intentions can backfire.
"There
may be situations where the intent of the taxation is reversed, in that alcohol
consumption increases rather than decreases because the alcohol of choice has
become cheaper. Basically, they buy more and end up drinking more,"
Caetano said about a 2006 study
in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.
"In
general, the evidence suggests that as you increase taxes, and alcoholic
beverages become more expensive, individuals tend to use alcohol less,"
Caetano said.
"However,
the findings in this paper indicate that the reality is not so simple, because
there are alcoholic beverages at different levels of price, and when you
implement taxation, what happens is that the individuals who are able to
purchase the alcoholic beverages that were more expensive just switch to less
expensive ones."
Nonetheless,
Dr. Lawrence Loh of the Fraser Health Authority disagrees, arguing that a 2013 study
found alcohol-related injuries would drop by nine per cent for every 10 per
cent price increase.
That
2013 report for the Institute of Alcohol Studies was co-authored by University
of Victoria psychologist Tim Stockwell and was used in the failed attempt to
support introduction of minimum prices in the United Kingdom, which was rejected
last year.
"Data
from Canadian provinces suggest that a 10 per cent increase in average minimum
prices would result in the region of an eight per cent reduction in
consumption, a nine per cent reduction in hospital admissions and a 32 per cent
reduction in wholly alcohol-caused deaths -- with further benefits accruing two
years later," wrote
Stockwell and co-author Gerald Thomas, also of UVic.
Nevertheless,
the U.K.'s Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government, which had promised
a "minimum unit price" for alcohol in 2012, was ultimately
unconvinced.
Easier
to price than address abuse
While
minimum pricing is controversial, it's still an easier if ineffective fix for
governments than looking at some of the root causes of alcohol abuse.
Professor
Caetano said another 2010 study
identified several sociodemographic predictors for drinking to intoxication.
Heavy
drinkers, or those who got drunk more than once a month, tended to be found
more among males under 60 years of age who did not have a college degree. Those
who were unemployed or unmarried also had higher risk factors.
Caetano
said that while more Caucasians, Hispanics and African-Americans reported
drinking between 1992 and 2002, meaning drinking in general has increased, only
Caucasian women consumed more drinks per person than the previous average.
Clearly
none of these factors can be easily remedied. Nor will higher booze prices
change your age, education, employment or relationship status, gender or other
risk factors -- just the price.
Minimum
alcohol prices are regressive, like other taxes that disproportionately and
negatively impact lower-income people more.
In
other words, those drinking expensive Champagne are not as affected by $2 more
a glass as the working poor, students and others.
The
reality is that problem drinkers won't change their destructive behaviour
simply because of higher prices. The rest of us will just pay more -- unhappily.
If you believe
Happy Hour should mean lower, not higher, drink prices, join my new Fix BC Happy Hour page on
Facebook.
.
2 comments:
Reason for minimum charge is so that we don't have a lot of drunks out on the street because they can get liquor at 7-11 Double Gulp size and prices.
Are you insane enough to allow $1.25 pints? $1.00 per glass of vodka?
Hello Bill
Just read this article and once again find it mind stimulating. Only one comment so far as it is a long weekend and most folks, including yours truly, are enjoying one of the best summer seasons in recent or long term memory. I do not have to type that I agree with your observations.To bad the lieberals are too blind to see the true. Carry on Sir William and I thank you.
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