British booze consumption in biggest fall for 60 years

September 3, 2010

Notorious abroad for their binge-drinking, Britons bucked the trend last year with alchohol consumption in the country showing its biggest fall since 1948, the industry said Friday.

Health concerns and the recession triggered a six percent year-on-year decline in 2009, also the fourth annual drop in five years, figures released by the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) showed.

Alchohol consumption in Britain remained below the European Union average, said the association, which relied mainly on statistics from Britain's taxes and customs agency.

But 39 percent of British men and 31 percent of women still exceeded the recommended daily amount of booze, it added.

"These figures will confound many pundits, as yet again they confirm that as a nation, we are not drinking more. Those who suggest otherwise need to focus on the hard facts," BBPA chief executive Brigid Simmonds said in a statement.

British drinkers are now consuming 13 percent less alcohol than in 2004, the association said.

Beer maintains a special place in British hearts, accounting for 60 percent of all sales in pubs, hotels and restaurants, against wine on 17 percent, it added.

Simmonds said the survey "also reminds us of just how vital a role beer and pubs play in the UK economy, in terms of turnover, jobs, and tax revenues."

British authorities have long struggled to contain a binge-drinking culture which makes some town centres no-go zones on Friday and Saturday nights, and to introduce so-called "continental style" habits.

The new coalition government has proposed minimum prices for alcohol to tackle the problem and is also set to scrap the country's 24-hour drinking laws.

The Scottish government on Thursday proposed a minimum price for alcohol of 45 pence (70 US cents, 54 euro cent) per unit, saying setting such a mark would save Scotland's health service more than 700 million pounds (one billion dollars, 840 million euros) over 10 years.

Former British premier Tony Blair admitted in his memoirs published this week he too was "at the outer limit" of the recommended intake while in Downing Street -- saying he used whisky, gin and wine as a "prop" to deal with stress.

(c) 2010 AFP

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ormondotvos
Sep 03, 2010

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That's funny -- my wife tagged Blair as another dry drunk like W Bush as soon as she saw him. Women!!!
yyz
Sep 03, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
"But 39 percent of British men and 31 percent of women still exceeded the recommended daily amount of booze"

I live in the US so please excuse my query but....what is the "recommended daily amount of booze" over there?
fixer
Sep 03, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
I gave up drinking about 3 years ago for health reasons.
Now that those issues are mostly behind me I feel no incentive to start again.
The people I associate with these days are small or nondrinkers so I have no peer pressure.
Rank 4.5 /5 (2 votes)
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