The Hamilton Spectator

Alcohol escalator tax needs a ceiling

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS OPINION SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS IS SENIOR DIRECTOR OF THE AGRI-FOOD ANALYTICS LAB AND A PROFESSOR IN FOOD DISTRIBUTI­ON AND POLICY AT DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY. TROY MEDIA

Everything is more expensive these days at the grocery store. We’ve also seen increases at the liquor store, or wherever you purchase your favourite alcoholic beverages. Well, these products are about to get more expensive yet again.

In 2017, the federal government had the brilliant idea of indexing taxes on alcoholic beverages to align with inflation. It’s called an escalator tax. The idea was to make hikes more predictabl­e, but without any parliament­ary oversight or considerat­ion for changing market conditions. Despite concerns registered by our alcohol industry, Ottawa marched on.

Before the pandemic, inflation was not as significan­t an issue as now. Few noticed that taxes on alcohol increase every year. But the shock will hit us this year due to our very high inflation rate. So in a few weeks from now, on April 1, that tax will increase by 6.3 per cent, making it the highest increase ever. Canadians will have to pay an additional $125 million in taxes per year, starting April 1, when buying beer, wine and/or spirits.

Canada already has the highest alcohol taxes among G7 countries. In fact, taxes alone account for around 50 per cent of the price of beer, 65 per cent of the price of wine, and 75 per cent of the price of spirits.

We have seen five consecutiv­e hikes since the escalator clause was implemente­d in 2017, which allowed Canada to surpass Japan with the highest tax rate on alcohol in the industrial­ized world. For anti-alcohol advocates, this may be seen as encouragin­g news. Making alcohol more financiall­y prohibitiv­e will get consumers to drink less. It makes perfect sense from a public health perspectiv­e.

The market size for Canadian breweries will exceed $7.5 billion by the end of this year. Over 17,000 people work in the beer industry alone. We now have more than 1,200 breweries and microbrewe­ries in the country, and many are operated by craft brewers employing just a handful of employees. The wine industry contribute­s almost $12 billion to our economy at present. And, of course, we have restaurant­s, pubs and bars which rely on alcohol sales to make a living.

According to Restaurant Canada, in 2022, in many provinces, for every restaurant opening, two closed. As a result, the ripple effect of increased prices on the alcoholic beverage industry is clearly measurable. Across Canada, beer sales are down 3.6 per cent over the last 12 months, according to Beer Canada.

Liquor boards will also be impacted by the tax increase. Gross profits for all liquor authoritie­s and government revenue from sales of alcoholic beverages across the country now reach almost $10 billion per year, according to Statistics Canada. These sales are helping provinces fund hospitals, schools, roads, and other infrastruc­ture they need to maintain.

We learned from similar increases in tobacco tax that higher prices might lead to an increase in illicit activities as consumers seek cheaper alternativ­es. For alcohol, this means bootleggin­g and smuggling, which can negatively affect public health and safety, as illicitly produced alcohol may be of lower quality and pose greater risks to consumers. This is not the road we want to take.

Some maintain the escalator tax, which few Canadians know about, is undemocrat­ic because of the lack of parliament­ary oversight. Perhaps, but there is no denying that the escalator tax will eventually make all legal alcohol products in Canada less affordable.

It may be time for Parliament to step in and investigat­e the escalator tax and see whether it should be capped or at least a ceiling clause of some sort set when inflation reaches a certain level.

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