This Library Briefing Paper looks at alcohol pricing
and calls for a minimum unit price.
The debate about a minimum price for alcohol has been prompted by
concerns about high levels of drinking, its effect on public
health and public order, and a widespread belief that most of the
alcohol that contributes to drunken behaviour is
irresponsibly priced and sold.
One policy option is to set a minimum price per unit of alcohol
(MUP). Another is to ban the sale of alcohol below cost price
(the level of alcohol duty plus VAT).
Policy in Scotland
Alcohol licensing is a devolved matter. In June 2012, the
Scottish Government passed the Alcohol (Minimum
Pricing) Scotland Act 2012. This would enable the
introduction of MUP.
The Scottish Whisky Association challenged the
legislation in the European and Scottish courts. On 15 November
2017, the UK Supreme Court said that the
2012 Act did not breach EU law.
The Scottish Government plans to
introduce MUP from 1 May 2018. A public consultation
on the preferred price of 50p per unit ran from 1 December
2017 to 26 January 2018.
Policy in England and Wales
On 22 November 2017, the Government said that it
“noted the ruling of the UK Supreme Court in favour of the
Scottish Government. Minimum unit pricing will continue to remain
under review pending the impact of its implementation in
Scotland.”
In May 2014, the Coalition Government introduced a ban on
the sale of alcohol below cost price. This followed its decision
not to go ahead with the alcohol
strategy's (March 2012) commitment to introduce MUP.
After consulting on the
strategy, the then Government said there was not enough
“concrete evidence” that MUP would be effective in reducing the
harms associated with problem drinking without penalising
responsible drinkers.
Alcohol charities (e.g. Alcohol Concern) and public health groups
continue to argue for MUP, claiming that this would have
more of an impact on alcohol-related harm than the ban on below
cost selling.
An April 2017 House of Lords Committee report on the
Licensing Act 2003 recommended that if MUP was introduced in
Scotland and found to be effective in reducing excessive
drinking, then the policy should also be introduced in England
and Wales.