Minimum Pricing Ineffective and Illegal, says SWA

A minimum unit price for alcohol set out in yesterday's Scottish Government Bill is unlikely to reduce alcohol misuse, is probably illegal and threatens one of Scotland’s key industries, the Scotch Whisky Association (SWA) has said.

Date:

Wed, 02 Nov 2011

Source:

Scotch Whisky Association

Scotch Whisky Association:

Website

The SWA noted that Scottish Government-commissioned research shows minimum pricing having no impact on the proportion of heavy drinkers.

By violating European Union andinternational trade rules and encouraging copycat trade barriers the policy puts at risk Scotch whisky exports worth more than £3.4 billion a year, says the SWA.

Minimum pricing on spirits has been ruled illegal by the European Court of Justice as it is seen as a barrier to trade which should not be used when other less trade restrictive means are available.

Last week, the UK Government said minimum pricing was probably illegal. The SWA said minimum pricing is a misguided policy when health problems and deaths as a result of alcohol misuse are already falling in Scotland. Alcohol-related deaths have declined 15% in the last five years.

Gavin Hewitt, chief executive of the Scotch Whisky Association, said: "The Scottish Government’s fixation with minimum pricing as the solution to alcohol-related harm is misguided.

"The impact of recent legislation has not yet been fully felt and many other measures to address alcohol misuse remain untested.

"The Scotch whisky industry agrees that Scotland’s drinking culture has to change. We are working with the Scottish Government to deliver that.

"Minimum pricing is the wrong policy option. It will not achieve the objective of a more healthy, positive and responsible attitude to alcohol.

"Claims that Scotch whisky as a ‘premium product’ has nothing to fear from minimum pricing are misplaced. Within Scotland, less affluent consumers who buy own-label Scotch whisky will be hit, while the knock-on impact of copycat trade barriers overseas could lead to enormous damage in the industry’s exports markets.

"Only last week the UK Government confirmed that minimum pricing is probably illegal. A legal alternative would be to work with the UK Government on a UK basis to remove tax discrimination between different drinks and to introduce a ‘floor price’ for alcohol based on the revised duty rates and VAT."

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