Glasgow Times

Alcohol prices went up faster after minimum price roll- out

- BY TOM TORRANCE

DRINKERS in Scotland saw alcohol prices go up faster than those south of the border after minimum pricing laws were introduced, a report has found, with strong ciders and own- brand spirits rising the most.

But after flagship minimum unit pricing ( MUP) laws were introduced by the Scottish Government in 2018, the cost of Buckfast fell, Public Health Scotland said, dropping from 67p per unit in 2017- 18 to 65p the year after.

The law makes retailers charge at least 50p per unit of alcohol, and is intended as a way of reducing the appeal of cheap high- strength drinks.

Dr Karl Ferguson, of the health body, said: “In the first 12 months after MUP was implemente­d we found that, especially for products that were priced below 50p per unit of alcohol prior to MUP, prices went up, the amount sold in larger container sizes went down, and sales also declined. We also found that, because of the price increase, even in instances where the volume of sales went down, the value of sales remained fairly constant or increased.”

Public Health Scotland said the average price of alcoholic drinks in shops increased north of the border to a greater extent than in England and Wales over the same period.

Average prices in Scotland increased in the first year of the law from 60p per unit to 66p, while in England and Wales it grew from 60p to 61p.

Supermarke­t prices rose by almost 18%, from 56p to 66p per unit, while in convenienc­e stores they went from 63p to 67p.

The steepest price rises were for strong ciders and perries in convenienc­e stores and own- brand cider and spirits in supermarke­ts, many of which were below 50p per unit before the law was introduced.

But the research found products which increased least in average price, like some pre- mixed drinks, or those that fell, like some fortified wines, appeared most likely to see increased sales.

Public Health Scotland looked at sales data between May 2016 and April 2019 as part of its investigat­ion into the minimum pricing, which will expire unless MSPs vote to renew it in before May next year.

Changes were also seen in sales across different container sizes, including reductions in the amount sold in larger single- item containers, especially for some ciders and own- brand spirits in bottles of one litre and over, Public Health Scotland said.

The amount of beer and cider sold in the largest multipacks also fell, while sales in smaller multipacks increased.

Alison Douglas, chief executive of Alcohol Focus Scotland, said: “Increasing the price of alcohol is one of the most effective and costeffect­ive policy measures to reduce alcohol consumptio­n and harm. This research shows that people in Scotland respond to price.”

 ?? ?? A report found prices surged faster than south of the border after the introducti­on of minimum pricing laws
A report found prices surged faster than south of the border after the introducti­on of minimum pricing laws

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