Scottish government rewrites minimum alcohol pricing press release
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“The official evaluation of minimum pricing consists of 40 studies. Only one of them suggested that the policy has reduced alcohol-related deaths. The other 39 studies indicate that the policy has either achieved nothing or has been counterproductive. The Scottish government cherry-picked the one study that supported their policy and sent out a press release insisting that minimum pricing had worked.
“The Scottish government has now rewritten that press release to remove its most misleading claims. This is a welcome development but it is shutting the stable for after the horse has bolted. The public has been given the false impression that minimum pricing has been a success. With alcohol-related deaths at a 14 year high in Scotland, that is contestable, to say the least.”
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Notes to Editors
Contact: media@iea.org.uk / 07763 365520
In May 2022, Christopher Co-authored The Hangover: The cost of minimum alcohol pricing in Scotland, showing that minimum pricing had cost Scottish consumers £270 million in its first four years, with little evidence of its promised health and social benefits: https://iea.org.uk/publications/the-hangover-the-cost-of-minimum-alcohol-pricing-in-scotland/
This year, Christopher also wrote for The Critic, arguing that minimum pricing had been a policy failure in its first five years: https://thecritic.co.uk/minimum-pricing-miserable-results/
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