- 14 Nov 14, 23:09#425548
Hookers and blow!
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Alcohol is 45% more affordable than it was in 1980
Alcohol misuse costs England approximately £21bn per year in healthcare, crime and lost productivity costs
Average alcohol consumption has gradually fallen in many OECD countries between 1980 and 2009 with an average overall decrease of 9%. The United Kingdom however, has seen an increase of over 9% in these three decades
It is estimated that 2.6 million children in the UK are living with parents who are drinking hazardously and 705,000 living with dependent drinkers
In the tax year 2009 to 2010 the UK government generated £9 billion in receipts from alcohol duties, around 2% of the government’s total revenue from taxation. Receipts are fairly evenly split between beer (£3.2 billion), wine (£2.9 billion) and spirits (£2.6 billion). Cider has traditionally been a small component of total duty receipts (£300 million).
Dear Mr Walker,
Thank you for your recent email to the Department of Health about the
revenue generated from tobacco sales. I have been asked to reply.
It is very difficult to establish an exact figure on what smoking related
ill-health costs the NHS. However, smoking is the largest single cause of
preventable illness and premature death in the UK. It kills 106,000
people every year and costs the British taxpayer more than -L-1.7billion a
year in treatment bills alone. It causes 84 per cent of deaths from lung
cancer and 83 per cent of deaths from chronic obstructive lung disease,
including bronchitis.
The revenue generated from tobacco products is a matter for HM Treasury.
However, it should be noted that the Government, as a whole, has made the
decision to reduce smoking rates in England. In 2004, the Government
agreed an overarching target to reduce smoking substantially from 25 per
cent in 2004 to 21 per cent or less by 2010 and to reduce smoking among
routine and manual groups to 26 per cent or less. The Government expects
that reducing smoking rates will lead to a loss of revenue to the
Exchequer. However, any loss to the Exchequer is balanced by the fact
that thousands of lives are saved through the Government's tobacco control
strategy.
Should you wish to contact HM Treasury about the revenue generated from
tobacco products, their email address is:
[1][email address]
I hope this reply is helpful,
Yours sincerely,
Cameron Gordon
Customer Service Centre
IF governments were serious about reducing the consequences of alcohol or tobacco,
they would make both substances illegal. They don't. Why? It's quite simple really.
As simple as looking at the crazy amounts of money that is collected on taxes from
the sales of alchol and tobacco products.
Add to that, the crazy amounts of money being raked in by health care system in the
treatment of the abuse of these substances. There are also many corporations that
benefit from the sales of both alcohol and tobacco. Don't forget the huge population
of employees whose livelihood is tied up in various aspects of these two markets.
In banning advertising, governments are making a rather half-hearted attempt at
appeasing special interest groups.
...Why not just ban alcohol tobacco etc? we know its bad, why not ban fossil fuels extraction and burning, we know thats bad as well. The answer is that there is not a person alive today who could make those decisions stick, there are too many vested interests against. The policy maker who represents a whole town where all the employment is provided by the oil company or tobbaco grower or distiller etc etc etc...
See our F1 related articles too!