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Should shopkeepers pay for our addiction to drink?



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EVERYONE is aware of the true cost of Scotland's love affair with alcohol. Two-fifths of men and a quarter of women in Scotland exceed the recommended daily limit for alcohol intake, producing nearly 2,500 alcohol-related deaths every year. But the pain and social cost go further.
Alcohol misuse and the violence and medical conditions it spawns now cost Scotland (and the taxpayer) over £1 billion a year. One in six road deaths is due to drink driving. Alcohol is a factor in more than half the deaths caused by fire in Scotla
nd. And one in five patients discharged from psychiatric units has an alcohol-related diagnosis.

This epidemic shows no sign of diminishing.

Cheap drink and a culture that uses alcohol freely as a social lubricator has led to a doubling of alcohol-related deaths among women during the past decade.

Such a social crisis cannot continue without doing serious damage to the nation. This is why the decision of the Justice Secretary, Kenny MacAskill, to concentrate his energies on raising public awareness regarding the alcohol abuse problem, is to be applauded.

Mr MacAskill has rightly focused on the need for "a long-term drive to change Scotland's culture – to help make sure drinking to get drunk is simply no longer seen as acceptable".

Last year, in pursuit of this broad aim, Mr MacAskill proposed a levy on clubs and pubs to help pay for the extra policing bill caused by having to contain drunken violence on the streets. The minister justified this on the "polluter pays" principle, that as the drinks industry benefits financially from selling the alcohol that causes the problem, the industry should help pay to sort out the mess. Yesterday, he suggested extending that principle to retailers, large and small, who sell alcohol across the counter. The money so raised would go to local and community initiatives designed to discourage alcohol abuse, especially among the young.

Mr MacAskill is to be commended for his zeal to seek new ways of making Scotland confront its addiction. However, there are questions that need to be asked about his latest idea. Is the retail levy meant to be punitive and so price alcohol out of the reach of the young? Surely that would hurt small shopkeepers (necessary for any community), as well as penalise those who use alcohol sensibly.

Or is the levy designed as a tax to fund alcohol education programmes? That is laudable, but surely we need to fund those through mainstream public expenditure, otherwise we risk sending the message that such programmes are peripheral. And if retailers are to be levied, would it not be better to return the money to them to finance a sensible-drinking campaign? Besides, why not crack down harder on the off-licences which sell to under-age drinkers, rather than penalise law-abiding shopkeepers?





The full article contains 485 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Ninian Reid,

Edinburgh 12/02/2008 07:48:55
Sadly, it's all too possible to die for your country at the age of 18. Nevertheless, there could be a case for raising the alcohol-purchasing age to 21 as a small measure in curbing excessive,life-threatening consumption. On the other hand,there must be a way of electronically restricting the amount of cheap alcohol at the point of sale to ensure that the moderate inbiber isn't penalised through the wanton actions of the irresponsible, problem drinker who frequently unleashes misery on the rest of society.Moderation,my friends - not taxation.
2

loosehead,

Edinburgh 12/02/2008 10:01:53
Anybody who thinks that shopkeepers, and that includes publicans, will "pay for our addiction to drink" is living in a parallel universe - or seriously addicted. The levy will be passed on to the consumer, abuser and modest user alike.
There is no levy on the price of road fuel simply because a minority of people abuse it - speeding, dangerous driving, robbery getaways, etc - so why should alcohol be treated any differently? Some of those abuses also result in an enormous cost to the NHS in the same way as excess drinking.
As Ninian Reid says, impose a point-of-sale control. What about a minimum retail price based on ABV at outlets which do not sell a volume of draught beer equivalent to the volume sold of canned or bottled drink of all kinds? This would safeguard the pub and club price while making the supermarket and corner shop price at least a bit more realistic.
3

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 12/02/2008 12:13:48
Just who does the author think he (or she) is by declaring that Scotland has an addiction to alcohol?

By implication that means that I am now being told that I have an addiction to alcohol. I take great exception to that.

OK, I do not stick to their rediculously low limits. I sometimes get a bit drunk. On occasions I may get a hangover. I encourage others to have a drink. I can handle my drink like a man should be able to and I have FUN!

I'm not going to start counting how many of their daft "units" I am drinking. Why should I? I know my limits and stick within them.

There are some people who act up when they have a drink inside them and they should be dealt with using EXISTING LAWS. We do not need any more laws. We do not need higher taxes on alcohol. We do not need additional restrictions on the sale or consumption of alcohol.

MacAskill is certainly NOT to be commended for the oppressive action that he is proposing which will affect the law-abiding majority.

 

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Today's Vote

Do you think it’s a good idea to raise the legal age for buying drink to 21?
Yes, it would help fight the teenage drink problem
No, it would penalise those 18-21s who are not a problem
It would make no difference to underage drinking

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