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Alcopop Makers Elude Calif. Tax Hike
January 16, 2009

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News Summary

Makers of so-called "alcopop" drinks have apparently dodged a tax hike in California by reformulating their products so that they will continue to be taxed like beer, not liquor, the Sacramento Bee reported Dec. 31.

A three-year advocacy effort resulted in California reclassifying alcopops as liquor, which would have seen the drinks taxed at $3.30 per gallon instead of the beer rate of 20 cents per gallon. State lawmakers also approved a bill that required the drinks to carry a large label stating that they contain alcohol.

However, alcopop makers like Diageo got around the tax increase by tweaking the formula so that the drinks do not fall under the state's definition of liquor, which includes any beverages containing more than 0.5 percent of alcohol from flavorings derived from distilled spirits.

"All the leading products have been reformulated," said industry lawyer Marc E. Sorini. "The only economic impact is higher costs in the industry that may or may not be passed on to the consumer."

"Our technical team made sure that our product looks and tastes the same as the other formulation," said Zsoka McDonald, a spokeswoman for Diageo.

"Consumers can't notice a difference."

Michael Scippa, advocacy director of the Marin Institute, which lobbied for the higher taxes on alcopops, said that the alcohol-content definition may have been a weakness in the law but also was skeptical that the formula really had been changed.

"It is disappointing, but the mere fact that it brought the issue on the radar screen for a lot of policymakers is good," said Scippa. "It's not like the problems are going to go away overnight just because the products have been reformulated." The chair of the state's tax board said she would push for the contents of the drinks to be verified so that the true spirit of the regulations is adhered to.

The reformulation also means that the alcopops don't have to comply with the new labeling law.

Read moreMakers of 'alcopops' can't be allowed to pull a fast one on tax (Fresno Bee editorial, Jan. 15, 2009)

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by lisaf-breakingthecycles.com on 20 Jan 09 02:20 PM EST
Unfortunate, to be sure, but I agree that it at least brings this issue to the attention of lawmakers. I would love to see container labeling of alcoholic beverages that requires a notice of the number of standard drinks therein (e.g., alcopop bottle = 1.5 standard drinks, 12 ounce beer bottle = 1 standard drink, bottle of table wine = 5 standard drinks, etc.). Additionally, I think menu labeling of drinks with their standard drink content would be equally helpful to consumers (e.g., Long Island Ice Tea = 3 standard drinks).

Posted by Chip on 21 Jan 09 05:51 AM EST
Darn it! That's really too bad! EVERYONE knows that increasing taxes and manufacturing costs during a depression is a truly GREAT idea!! I can't believe that those evil businesspeople actually outsmarted a group of politicians that legislate with what amounts to the finely honed cutting edge of a ball bat.

Posted by Bill Crane on 23 Jan 09 07:03 PM EST
Clever industry! I wonder if they also could figure out a way to stop marketing their products to kids. Probably not, that's just not the kind of thing that offers them any incentive...

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