Title: Ethical considerations in alcohol policies and decisions on them
1Ethical considerations in alcohol policies and
decisions on them
- Robin Room
- AER Centre for Alcohol Policy Research,
- Turning Point Alcohol Drug Centre
- School of Population Health, University of
Melbourne - robinr_at_turningpoint.org.au
- Presented at a conference, The Alcohol Policy
Arena - Positioning Science, Knowledge and Policy in
- Relation to the Alcohol Industry, Dublin,
Ireland 15-16 May, 2008
2Alcohol and other psychoactive substances as
objects of desire and as commodities
- Considerable natural demand
- Operating on pathways in the brain shared with
eating, sex, other pleasures - Multiple functions
- Physical stimulation, sedation, intoxicant,
thirst-quenching, nutrition, solvent,
performance-enhancing, medication - Symbolic comradeship, celebration,
disinhibition, status distinction, sacrament - Psychoactive substances as commodities
- Plant products wide growing range for sources
of alcohol - Production often easily industrialized (beer,
liquor)? - Price of production often low
- Market economy and good transport ? increased
availability - Advertising and promotion stimulating demand
3Why control at all? -- Health and welfare
- Health harm
- Injuries to others
- Injuries to user (including poisoning)?
- Chronic health problems for user
- Addiction/dependence (a problem in itself)?
- Social problems
- Chronic and acute
- To user and to others
- Interpersonal and collective (e.g. worksite
productivity)?
4Inherent harmfulness alcohol vs. other drugs1.
adverse effects for heavy users of the most
common form (Hall et al., 1999)
5Inherent harmfulness alcohol vs. other drugs2.
lethality, intoxication, dangerousness
6Options for controlling the market in a commodity
with inherent harmfulness
- Prohibition (heroin, cannabis, cocaine )?
- Prescription regime (valium, stimulants )?
- Market controls to restrict availability
(alcohol, tobacco)? - Time and place of sale
- Minimum purchase age
- Restrictions on advertising, promotion
- Restrictions on role of producers sellers
- State monopoly of market (disallowed in EU except
at retail)?
7The alcohol policy response in (WHOs) Europe (as
of 2005)?
- Diverse amounts and patterns of drinking
- Threefold range in consumption levels
- Full range in adverse patterns (trouble per
litre)? - Diverse responses in alcohol policies/market
control - Policy score -- range 4-15 (of possible 0-16) on
- Age limits for purchase and drinking
- Time and place restrictions on purchase
- Hours and days of sale, places of sale, density
of outlets - State monopoly vs. specific alcohol licenses vs.
neither - Price beer vs. cola spirits price vs. national
wealth - Advertising restrictions
- Drinking driving blood alcohol limit random
stop test
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9The commercial interestEuropean alcohol
industries are large globally dominant, with
interests on every continent
- Beer 3 of the top 4
- SAB Miller (UK-based)?
- Inbev/Interbrew (Belgium-based)?
- Heineken (Netherlands-based)?
- Spirits the top 2
- Diageo (UK-based)?
- Pernod Ricard (France-based)?
- Wine Europe ...
- Produces 71 of the wine (France, Italy, Spain
dominate)? - Consumes 68
- Accounts for 75 of exports (but includes within
EU)?
10The European industries have policy interests at
multiple levels
- Global
- European nations and the EU are often used to
pressure for more open markets elsewhere, often
against a public health interest - Europe-wide
- The industries have deep interests in EU
agricultural policy (wine), the single market
(excise taxes and travelers allowances), the
services directive (likely to weaken alcohol
controls)? - National
- Still the primary level for dealing with many
issues, e.g. taxes, drink-driving and criminal
law, industry policies, advertising restrictions - Subnational
- Many alcohol policies are decided at subnational
levels in federal states and the UK - many problems created by drinking have to be
dealt with at the local level
11The fundamental commercial interest the bottom
line
- Governments and intergovernmental organizations
can affect this, so the fundamental industry
demand is to be at the policy table - In the interests of maximizing sales /or
profits - Use trade agreements, the EU single market, etc.
to remove any hindrances to free sales - Push down or hold down alcohol taxes
- Seek or maintain freedom to advertise and promote
- Oppose any public health or safety measures which
threaten sales /or profits - (But note that different segments/industries do
not necessarily have the same interests)?
12Arenas of action for industry interests
- Political
- International
- Trade and commercial agencies WTO, EU
- Public health WHO, the EUs DG-SANCO
(Directorate for Health Consumer Protection)? - National and subnational
- Governments, political parties, departments
agencies - Public opinion and the media
- The professions and researchers as influencers
- Can speak with authority /or help or harm
- ? Industry efforts to influence them
13Mechanisms for action - 1
- The firm itself (public relations, legal depts,
etc.)? - National trade bodies
- e.g., British Beer and Pub Association
- European trade bodies
- Brewers of Europe
- European Spirits Organization (CEPS)?
- Comité européen des entreprises vins
- LAssociation des Industries des Cidres Vins de
fruits de lU.E (AICV)? - Lobbying institutional and personal
14Mechanisms for action - 2
- Social aspects organizations
- Global International Center for Alcohol Policy
(ICAP)? - Europe-wide European Forum for Responsible
Drinking (EFRD)? - National e.g., Portman Group in UK
- In W. Europe Belgium (2), Czech Rep., Denmark,
France, Hungary, Ireland, Italy (2), Malta,
Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, UK - Research funding or hosting bodies
- International e.g. International Life Sciences
Institute (ILSI)? - Europe-wide European Research Advisory Board
(ERAB)? - National e.g. IREB in France
15Indirect methods co-optation of the research
world Europe-wide
- European Research Advisory Board (ERAB)?
- Established 2003, funded by Brewers of Europe
- Modeled on Alcohol Beverage Medical Research
Foundation (ABMRF) in north America - 6 members of 14-member Board from industry
- 3 MDs on Board, including
- President of ABMRF
- Author of a book on Wine and Health
- 23 grants listed so far
- 15 biomedical, 4 clinical, 4 psychosocial
- 8 UK, 4 each Italy Germany, 2 each Neth.
Finland, 1 each Denmark, Sweden, Portugal
16Indirect methods co-optation of the research
world - national
- Institut de recherches scientifiques sur le
boissons (IREB)? - Funded by 12 mostly French-based firms, led by
Pernod Ricard - Focusalcoologie 9 (2005) reports on work
supported by IREB - 21 biomedical studies, including 10 on rats
- 9 social science studies
- Some ideological tinges in the report
- 2 studies are fighting the idea that alcohol
consumption is related to familial alcoholism
17The processes of pressure influence glimpsing
the woodpecker in the forest
- Social aspects organizations directly controlled
- Research funding or hosting bodies have industry
represented in governance (and funding can be cut
off)? - Industry participation in NGOs influence is
often less visible - Industry influence in politics often invisible
- Visible traces e.g. calls from the minister to
civil servants clearly prompted by industry
pressure
18Some observations differential strength within
European countries
- Big exporting/multinational firms have had strong
influence in headquarters countries - Particularly UK
- Centralization weakens their influence in other
states where they operate - The relatively dispersed wine industry has had
enormous EU influence through the growers - Minimum EU wine tax 0 as a signal of power
- Zero tax in 6 wine-growing states
- Where there have been state monopolies, alcohol
industry influence has been weak - Dissolution of production and wholesale
monopolies in Finland, Sweden, Norway creates a
space for new industry influences, but so far
they are weak - National social aspects organizations in 14 of 25
EU states - Strongest in middle and southwest Europe
- Reflecting strong industries and national
contention over alcohol?
19Some observations international venues
- In the EU
- Given the EUs inception as a market agreement
and its late and weak jurisdiction over public
health, - there is a long tradition of alcohol industries
sitting at EU tables, - a much weaker tradition of NGOs and civil
society being there - Industry influence has weakened the EU Strategy
on Alcohol - WHO and WHO-Euro are pulled two ways
- Strong pressure for collaboration with the
industry from the US and some European countries - But previous cautionary experiences from tobacco,
pharmaceuticals, baby formula industries - Industry interests often rely on national
delegations as paladins in international
organizations. - The UK and Germany have often acted in alcohol
industry interests on alcohol policy in the EU
20Countering the influence of private interests in
public alcohol policy
- Setting limits on co-optation
- Public health policies concerning alcohol need
to be formulated by public health interests,
without interference from commercial interests. - Declaration on Young People and Alcohol, WHO-Euro
Ministerial Conference, Stockholm 2001
httpwww.euro.who.int/Policy/20030204_1 - Levelling the playing field
- Legitimated and routine representation of public
health interest in trade and commerce policy
matters - WTO, trade dispute adjudications, commercial
policymaking - Negotiation of Framework Convention on Alcohol
Control - as counter to WTO and EU trade interests
- providing models for national policies
- Legitimating a public health or public order
rationale for state pre-emption of the market -