We are calling on the Chancellor to increase alcohol duty by 2% above inflation in this Budget.
While we await the outcome of the ongoing review of alcohol duty (to which we have already submitted evidencei), it is vital the Chancellor reverses years of real terms cuts to alcohol duty, which have lost £6.8bn in revenue since 2012, over a period when deaths rose dramatically.
A freeze on alcohol duty is, in effect, a real terms cut. Freezing or cutting duty in this Budget would:
Increasing alcohol duty would maintain or increase revenue and:
The public welcome increasing alcohol duty: 40% want an increase compared to just 14% who want a cut. 56% support an increase if the revenue is used to fund the NHS and police.
It’s time for everybody to play their part in the national recovery and rebuilding. We need the businesses who have seen increased profits throughout the pandemic (like large alcohol producers and supermarkets) to help bear the cost of alcohol harm.
As well as publishing the autumn Budget, this month the Chancellor will conclude the 2021 Spending Review; setting the budgets for government departments from 2022-23 to 2024-25, plus the devolved administrations’ block grants.
In a joint submission with our partners (Collective Voice, NHS Addiction Providers Alliance, Alcohol Health Alliance and Adfam), we are calling on the government to use the Spending Review to:
- fully fund Dame Carol Black’s long-term vision of rebuilding this country’s treatment and recovery system, projected to save many thousands of lives and many billions of pounds of public moneyii
- ensure any financial settlement is a multi-year commitment to provide frontline services with the security they need to plan effectively for the future
- restore the Public Health Grant (which Local Authorities use to pay for alcohol treatment services) to its 2015/16 leveliii