BC Liquor Stores - $42.90 + TAX = $49.44 CDN price |
San Francisco corner store - $17.99 US or $24.06 CDN price |
Local wineries could face supermarket squeeze while
consumers swallow the cost.
Bill Tieleman’s 24
Hours Vancouver / The Tyee
column
Tuesday
December 1, 2015
By Bill Tieleman
"I've
seen the future, I can't afford it."
- ABC,
"How to Be a Millionaire," 1985
The future
is indeed unaffordable for wine, beer and spirits drinkers in British Columbia,
because what are already the highest prices in North America are doomed to rise
even more while B.C. wines get squeezed off the shelves.
Why?
Government policy of course.
The BC
Liberals are creating a brave new world of increasingly pricey alcoholic
beverages under the guise of "convenience."
But B.C.
liquor prices are already far too expensive -- take the example of just one
bottle of wine that costs double here what you can buy it for in California.
In San
Francisco in August in a nondescript corner store on Haight Street, I bought a
bottle of excellent Beringer Knights Valley Cabernet Sauvignon for US$17.99. In
Canadian dollars that's $24.06.
In BC Liquor
Stores, the regular price
is $42.90 -- plus 10 cent deposit, 10 per cent PST and five per cent GST adding
$6.44 for a final price of $49.44!
The B.C.
price is $25.38 more -- over twice the San Francisco price -- for the same
wine.
And while
that Beringer wine costs more in Quebec than San Francisco, at $37.25 including
taxes -- it's still $12.19 cheaper than in B.C. And in Ontario it's $39.95 or
$9.49 cheaper.
And it's not
just because Beringer make their wine in California. Across the country there's
Allendale Wine Shoppe in New Jersey, where you get a bottle of the exact same
wine for US$18.90 plus taxes of US$1.32 for a total of just US$20.22 -- or
CDN$27.04.
To add
insult to injury, the BC Liquor Stores website notes that it has sold Beringer
Knights Valley Cabernet Sauvignon since 1989, when the price was CDN$21.70.
That means
the San Francisco wine price in August 2015 was only CDN$2.36 a bottle more
than in B.C. a stunning 26 years ago in 1989.
Small
winery squeeze?
The Beringer
price isn't necessarily the model for all B.C. wine pricing over the past two
and a half decades -- but it isn't unique either.
And as bad
as that is, things will soon get far worse.
That's
because B.C. is starting to sell wine in supermarkets
and in every jurisdiction in the world, once that starts, those stores dominate
the market and crush smaller competitors.
The only
ones to benefit will be supermarket owners -- not cold beer and wine stores,
not independent wine outlets, not government liquor stores, not corner
groceries and most of all, definitely not consumers -- who will pay more and
have less choices.
In
Australia, a new report says just two supermarket chains account for 70 per cent
of all wine sales.
New Zealand
grocery giants similarly went from no share of the wine market in the 1980s to
nearly 70 per cent in a very short period of time, according
to one B.C. lawyer.
And despite
B.C.'s stated intention to only allow provincial wines to be sold in
supermarkets, California, Chile and the European Union have all said the rules violate
international trade agreements -- in other words, the world's wines, not just
those from B.C., will no doubt end up in supermarkets.
That will
mean small B.C. wineries with higher production costs than giant corporate
brands like Yellow Tail or Gallo will get squeezed out of both sales and shelf
space.
"Go
down a grocery aisle to the ketchup section. What do you see there? Heinz,
dominating the shelves," said
Kim Pullan of Church and State winery in August. "I see the same thing
happening to B.C. wine."
The bad,
ugly and 'on sale'
Consumers
might potentially benefit from free enterprise competition driving prices down
but not here -- because the BC Liberals aren't opening the market up -- they're
instead managing it to help bigger businesses take more market share without
competing on price.
And the
government will maintain it's huge revenue stream from overtaxing alcohol.
It's a bleak
situation for those who drink wine, beer and spirits and those brave souls who
produce it here in B.C.
But not
according to Premier Christy Clark's deputy chief of staff, Michele Cadario.
"You
can bet that this government will fight very strongly for this industry and we
would never do anything that would unnecessarily jeopardize it," Cadario told
a gathering of winery and liquor store owners in Penticton in October without a
hint of irony.
"For
the premier and this government, the B.C. wine industry is hugely
important," Cadario told an event organized by the BC Alliance for Smart
Liquor Retail Choices. "We know how jobs are tied to this and we know how
passionately the wine industry really feel."
It is
tempting to see how the government really feels about B.C. wineries by filing a
freedom-of-information request for all Cadario's communications on the subject
-- but that would be a waste of time -- because Cadario has been cited by the
Information and Privacy Commissioner for deleting
virtually all her emails.
The
government does have its defenders. The BC Wine Institute says
the move to place only B.C. wines in grocery shelves is "dramatically
changing the business outlook for the better" and claims it will not
negatively impact public or private stores.
That's
highly unlikely. Both the Alliance
and the BC Government and Service Employees Union called
in late September for a six-month moratorium on issuing new supermarket wine
licenses -- to no avail.
The only tiny
bit of good news? If you really still want that Beringer, it's on sale for $4
off in B.C. till Jan. 2 -- for "just" $38.90 plus tax.
.
2 comments:
Sobering thoughts Bill.
We may all be forced to 'drink the cool-aid'.
Christy isn't interested in competition within the wine industry nor is she interested in developing the B.C. Wine Industry. In my opinion, she is interested in helping the "big boys/girls" who have lots of money to donate to her re-election campaign. Just look at how much the new chancellor at U.B.C. donated to the B.C. Lieberals and how much gas, oil, mining receive from Christy and her cabal while welfare and disability rates haven't had a raise since 2007 because Christy says the province can't afford it.
Once the smaller wineries are out of business I expect Christy's friends will buy up the land and expand their empires. Lets hope she gets booted out of office before then. we need small wineries. they make great products and provide jobs in rural areas.
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