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Minimum alcohol pricing is nigh

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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 6,031 ✭✭✭KrustyUCC


    Exactly if consumption goes up increase MUP it's not working

    If consumption goes down increase MUP it's working

    Either way MUP will increase particularly if the North eventually brings it in


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,004 ✭✭✭FileNotFound


    KrustyUCC wrote: »
    Exactly if consumption goes up increase MUP it's not working

    If consumption goes down increase MUP it's working

    Either way MUP will increase particularly if the North eventually brings it in

    Did the change from 11.30pm to 10.00pm finish ever have an actual impact?

    I do not think i have ever seen a study reviewing its impact - positive or negative.


    This will be much the same - brought in - new norm - then the anti drink fruits can start inventing the next scheme.

    If only they would relax with a drink or 2 they might find some pleasure in life.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,177 ✭✭✭Fandymo


    tjhook wrote: »
    I think at this stage MUP is a done deal. The next question is how is its effectiveness going to be measured?

    If alcohol consumption goes down in the coming year, does it prove MUP works?

    If alcohol consumption goes up does it mean MUP works but more is needed?

    A kind of "heads I win, tails you lose"?

    Its being going down steadily since the start of the new millenium. We're mid table in Europe for alcohol consumption, and falling.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,632 ✭✭✭ShamNNspace


    ^^^ the findings, statistics call them what you will, will be twisted and bent to fit whatever agenda suits, the average Joe and Mary will be ones who foot the bill in the end


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,031 ✭✭✭KrustyUCC


    Did the change from 11.30pm to 10.00pm finish ever have an actual impact?

    I do not think i have ever seen a study reviewing its impact - positive or negative.


    This will be much the same - brought in - new norm - then the anti drink fruits can start inventing the next scheme.

    If only they would relax with a drink or 2 they might find some pleasure in life.

    The only change it made was that people had to buy alcohol earlier in the day

    I still think it's mad that you can't get a bottle of wine etc before lunch on a Sunday

    Contrast that to Krakow, Barcelona, Madrid, Paris where you can go on a night out and get a few beers on the way home as well


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  • Registered Users Posts: 17,636 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    tjhook wrote: »
    I think at this stage MUP is a done deal. The next question is how is its effectiveness going to be measured?

    If alcohol consumption goes down in the coming year, does it prove MUP works?

    If alcohol consumption goes up does it mean MUP works but more is needed?

    A kind of "heads I win, tails you lose"?


    The thing those for MUP will never admit to is alcohol consumption has dropped to 2/3 of what it was in 2005 in a year over year decline so if that trend simply continues they will just falsely claim MUP was responsible.


    Also the Irony is that alcohol consumption has decreased for the entire time they have claimed alcohol was getting cheaper.... try to get them to square that circle


  • Registered Users Posts: 37,713 ✭✭✭✭PTH2009


    It's all a load of bollocks. Basically making targets of Alcoholics and students 'lads because ye can't behave yourselves on cheap drink were putting the price up, that will show you'

    Government will make a killing with the tax from this


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,636 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    PTH2009 wrote: »
    Government will make a killing with the tax from this


    How is this misinformation still going around? There will be a neglible increase in taxes from this as its a minimum price cap not a tax hike, the vast vast majority of the new hiked prices will go to the shops and the alcohol producers.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,004 ✭✭✭FileNotFound


    VinLieger wrote: »
    How is this misinformation still going around? There will be a neglible increase in taxes from this as its a minimum price cap not a tax hike, the vast vast majority of the new hiked prices will go to the shops and therefore the alcohol producers.

    I'd say its more assumption than misinformation - assumed that any increase will mean monies generated are used to fight the issues.


    But unlike sugar and carbon taxes this one doesn't equate as you rightly point out.

    Personally that makes less sense to me - all we are doing is damaging market competition and impacting the everyday person who is not an alco.


  • Registered Users Posts: 27,792 ✭✭✭✭odyssey06


    PTH2009 wrote: »
    It's all a load of bollocks. Basically making targets of Alcoholics and students 'lads because ye can't behave yourselves on cheap drink were putting the price up, that will show you'
    Government will make a killing with the tax from this

    The only Government that'll be making a killing from it will be Her Majesty's Government, unless Stormont enacts the same folly.

    And they came for the alcoholics and the students first... my concern is that eventually they will ratchet up MUP so the prices are the same as pubs across the board.

    "To follow knowledge like a sinking star..." (Tennyson's Ulysses)



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  • Registered Users Posts: 9,264 ✭✭✭Macy0161


    Yes, they could at least argue justification if it was going to help those with issues.


  • Registered Users Posts: 17,636 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    Macy0161 wrote: »
    Yes, they could at least argue justification if it was going to help those with issues.


    If the entirety of the new price increase was a ring fenced tax hike going towards treatment etc I literally wouldn't have a problem and tbh would welcome it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,004 ✭✭✭FileNotFound


    VinLieger wrote: »
    If the entirety of the new price increase was a ring fenced tax hike going towards treatment etc I literally wouldn't have a problem and tbh would welcome it.

    Ditto to that - Never love tax increases but when they are put aside to get a job done i can get behind them.


    This is pure nonsense though


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,661 ✭✭✭buried


    VinLieger wrote: »
    If the entirety of the new price increase was a ring fenced tax hike going towards treatment etc I literally wouldn't have a problem and tbh would welcome it.

    This is exactly it. A easy cash grab from some of the most vulnerable in society. All in order to keep the greasy gold plated pensions for another section of our society, a section who if they had to survive in a actual functional and productive real economy, would be dead in a ditch long ago.

    "You have disgraced yourselves again" - W. B. Yeats



  • Registered Users Posts: 10,399 ✭✭✭✭ThunbergsAreGo


    Did the change from 11.30pm to 10.00pm finish ever have an actual impact?

    I do not think i have ever seen a study reviewing its impact - positive or negative.


    This will be much the same - brought in - new norm - then the anti drink fruits can start inventing the next scheme.

    If only they would relax with a drink or 2 they might find some pleasure in life.

    I got a nagin for the train instead of after, only real change...


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,649 ✭✭✭dirkmeister


    Rte.ie said there was “only” a 6.6% in consumption in their article this morning.

    Since when is it their job to decide what’s a good or bad rate of consumption?!?


  • Registered Users Posts: 27,792 ✭✭✭✭odyssey06


    The Sunday Independent had an opinion piece challenging the assumptions behind MUP (paywalled alas!)

    https://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/minimum-unit-pricing-of-alcohol-may-well-prove-acostly-solution-40378369.html

    "To follow knowledge like a sinking star..." (Tennyson's Ulysses)



  • Registered Users Posts: 18,895 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    Who is really driving all this - I mean there must be a group of lunatics somewhere behind the scenes, those sad sorry types that have few to no friends and hate anything anyone does that may constitute having fun.
    Alcohol Action Ireland

    The "Independent" (almost entirely government funded) charity

    I don't believe that it's that simple.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,399 ✭✭✭✭ThunbergsAreGo


    Tony EH wrote: »
    I don't believe that it's that simple.

    So what is it?


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    there's a definite cultural problem in Ireland with alcohol that could definitely do with changing.

    an over-reliance culturally on it due to a general lack of imagination and pure laziness in my opinion and cultural acceptance of excessive drinking and indeed encouragement of it.

    this is even evident in the cultural norms present where being excessively drunk is "great craic" and hangovers are even celebrated.

    the Irish vintners association would have you believe that the only fun to be had in Ireland was in a pub when in fact most of them are very uncomfortable and crappy places which you could only put up with if you're at least half-pissed.



    one of the few good things to come out of the pandemic might be an adjustment of the Irish relationship with the pub




    but going at the problem by increasing the off-trade price when it's already only behind Finland in the EU is not a good solution

    it's a classic Irish type of solution though.






    p.s. the two poll options are complete cack


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  • Registered Users Posts: 88 ✭✭Mecrab


    Will I still be able to get 4 cans of pratsky for a 5er?


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,031 ✭✭✭KrustyUCC


    1st January 2022 apparently for MUP


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,031 ✭✭✭KrustyUCC


    Mecrab wrote: »
    Will I still be able to get 4 cans of pratsky for a 5er?

    No you won't

    €1.66 a can so €6.63 for a 4 pack


  • Registered Users Posts: 445 ✭✭Garibaldi?


    KrustyUCC wrote: »
    1st January 2022 apparently for MUP
    Time to start brewing your own folks! Should be nicely matured by then!:D


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,478 ✭✭✭thomas 123


    Of all the problems we have in this country ...

    Gambling ads rammed down our throats on RTE, now I can’t even pre drink thinking I got a bit of value on my slab once a year.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,004 ✭✭✭FileNotFound


    KrustyUCC wrote: »
    No you won't

    €1.66 a can so €6.63 for a 4 pack

    And that will be round up to a clean 7.00 just for good measure. So a 40% increase in your cost.


  • Registered Users Posts: 18,895 ✭✭✭✭Tony EH


    So what is it?

    I don't know.

    But I certainly don't think it's down to a relatively tiny special interest group pulling the strings of all the major parties.

    This was put forth by FG as a measure to appease publican pressure to get people to stop drinking at home and into pubs more. Over the years it then became a "health" issue, but we all know that's baloney and just a smoke screen. And I also think that there will be an increase in duty on alcohol in the near future too, as part of the MUP scam. Maybe not in the next budget, but in one soon after.

    But like everything else that happens in Ireland, I suspect that this measure will probably come down to a desired financial outcome.


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,326 ✭✭✭✭jimmycrackcorm


    I disagree, the "drinking problems" are myths from the government.
    It's common sense. If Joe Soap has access to alcohol and drugs, and suddenly the price of one of those products increases, the alternative looks a lot more appealing.

    Personally, I don't really drink (about a can a month if you averaged it out across a year) and I've never touched drugs in any form. However, I can still see the obvious transition from one to the other that many people will make. Especially those in their teens who can now get off their tits for a fraction of the price than alcohol.

    Drug use is widely accepted in Irish society, despite the damage it does. People will turn to it fairly fast, in my opinion.

    That's not what the research into the post-Scottish introduction I linked says. so it isn't common sense. The vast majority of people who drink have no interest in drugs. People who do use drugs as a substitute are already using anyway - they might do some more but that's not the same as suggesting widespread replacement.

    Someone who drinks a bottle of wine every night won't suddenly turn to drugs as an alternative.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,399 ✭✭✭✭ThunbergsAreGo


    Tony EH wrote: »
    I don't know.

    But I certainly don't think it's down to a relatively tiny special interest group pulling the strings of all the major parties.

    This was put forth by FG as a measure to appease publican pressure to get people to stop drinking at home and into pubs more. Over the years it then became a "health" issue, but we all know that's baloney and just a smoke screen. And I also think that there will be an increase in duty on alcohol in the near future too, as part of the MUP scam. Maybe not in the next budget, but in one soon after.

    But like everything else that happens in Ireland, I suspect that this measure will probably come down to a desired financial outcome.

    That is very true, though they do have an influence.

    Can see Feank Feighnan has come out very on the side of this on Twitter. It won't go well for him.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,612 ✭✭✭Economics101


    Tony EH wrote: »

    This was put forth by FG as a measure to appease publican pressure to get people to stop drinking at home and into pubs more. /QUOTE]

    'Twas ever thus, the power of the publicans over politicians in Ireland


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