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Ban On Sales Below Tax Welcomed By
Whisky Distillers
The
UK Government’s proposal to ban alcohol
sales below tax in England and Wales has
been welcomed by The Scotch Whisky
Association (SWA).
Scotch Whisky distillers have campaigned
for over two years for such a measure to
be introduced as a legal way to set a
floor price for alcoholic drinks. The
SWA also called today for the same floor
price arrangements to be introduced in
Scotland.
With a bottle of beer, wine or spirits
displaying the alcohol content and
carrying a known tax burden, enforcement
of a ban on sales below excise duty and
VAT is simple to operate and
transparent.
The SWA supports the proposed ban as
part of a two stage approach to
modernising the UK alcohol duty regime.
A floor price, where a unit of beer is
taxed at 21p and of whisky at 29p,
highlights the differential taxation of
alcoholic drinks and reinforces the need
for a fairer excise duty system, with
all drinks taxed on the same basis
according to alcohol content.
Gavin Hewitt, SWA Chief Executive, said:
“A ban on alcohol sales below the cost
of excise duty and VAT is the right way
forward. The next stage should be reform
of an outdated duty system so that tax
discrimination between drinks categories
is removed and consumers are treated
fairly whatever drink they prefer. The
Budget in March offers an early
opportunity to begin to introduce a
fairer balance in alcohol taxation.”
Sales Tax
Facts
- The SWA has consistently argued
for the introduction of a ban on
alcohol sales below tax,
establishing a legal ‘floor’ price
for alcohol (as distinct from the
‘minimum price’ scheme envisaged by
the Scottish Government which would
have breached EU law).
- Alcohol served as Scotch Whisky
is already taxed some 250% higher
than the same amount of alcohol
served as cider, 37% higher than
beer, and 30% higher than for wine.
- With a ban on alcohol sales
below tax, the floor price for a
70cl bottle of Scotch Whisky would
be £8.00. By 2014, under current tax
policy set out by the UK Government,
the floor price would rise to
£10.33.
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