British Pint Could Hit 4 A Pop

Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum

Help Support Australia & New Zealand Homebrewing Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Zizzle

Well-Known Member
Joined
22/4/06
Messages
1,001
Reaction score
5
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/11/20/beer_price_warning/

Booze industry experts have issued a chilling warning that the British pint could hit 4 a pop - a price hike provoked by crap weather which has forced up the price of hops.

According to a sobering Guardian report, the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) estimates the average jar at 2.50 for lager, and 2.20 for bitter. Pundits say prices will rise by at least 15 per cent a pint, with doomongers slapping an extra 60 per cent on the cost of essential liquid refreshment.

This means that the price of a swift lager could skyrocket to an average four quid - enough to test the pocket of the most dedicated drinker.

Camra research and information manager Iain Lowe confirmed: "It is a bleak time for everyone. These price rises have been predicted for a long time. Hop farmers have not seen any price rises for years, but the appalling summer has finally forced the prices up. Prices at the pump could easily go up by 60 per cent."

To add to the gloom, a recent BBPA report revealed that "14 million fewer pints are being sold [per day] in pubs today - a slump of 49 per cent since the peak in 1979", and that major British brewers suffered a profit slump of 78 per cent between 2004 and 2006. Unsurprisingly, the BBPA insists the industry is "being further hampered by the Treasury which claims 33p out of the cost of every pint".

To underline the dire state of affairs, Scottish & Newcastle - responsible for three of Europe's top ten beers including Foster's and Kronenbourg - today confirmed price increases in 2008 "way above the rate of inflation". The company has fingered higher aluminium, cereal and crude oil costs as the cause, the Guardian explains.
 
Scary stuff. I wonder how much extra they will charge over here ?

For that matter, how much does a pint cost in Australia at the moment ?

I just don't seem to go out and drink much anyway. Not while I have beers at home.
 
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/11/20/beer_price_warning/

Booze industry experts have issued a chilling warning that the British pint could hit 4 a pop - a price hike provoked by crap weather which has forced up the price of hops.

According to a sobering Guardian report, the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) estimates the average jar at 2.50 for lager, and 2.20 for bitter. Pundits say prices will rise by at least 15 per cent a pint, with doomongers slapping an extra 60 per cent on the cost of essential liquid refreshment.

This means that the price of a swift lager could skyrocket to an average four quid - enough to test the pocket of the most dedicated drinker.

Camra research and information manager Iain Lowe confirmed: "It is a bleak time for everyone. These price rises have been predicted for a long time. Hop farmers have not seen any price rises for years, but the appalling summer has finally forced the prices up. Prices at the pump could easily go up by 60 per cent."

To add to the gloom, a recent BBPA report revealed that "14 million fewer pints are being sold [per day] in pubs today - a slump of 49 per cent since the peak in 1979", and that major British brewers suffered a profit slump of 78 per cent between 2004 and 2006. Unsurprisingly, the BBPA insists the industry is "being further hampered by the Treasury which claims 33p out of the cost of every pint".

To underline the dire state of affairs, Scottish & Newcastle - responsible for three of Europe's top ten beers including Foster's and Kronenbourg - today confirmed price increases in 2008 "way above the rate of inflation". The company has fingered higher aluminium, cereal and crude oil costs as the cause, the Guardian explains.


What makes me spew is when things do turnaround do you see the prices come down :excl: :excl: no bloody way, and if they do nowhere near the amount it went up. It is a bit like fuel prices here in Aus, blame every other country,Tom, Dick & whoever bang up the prices and leave them there. Then there is Johnys election to contend with. BRRRRRR

BYB
 
well I think we pay hugely inflated prices here in OZ compared to Europe so I figure this is catch up time for them!?! :huh:
 
Four quid is $9.30 today. Go to a micro in town and some are getting up to $8.50 now.

edit: and I think you get 440ml for that. I remember in school, a pint was 600ml.
 
Tony, I think you will find some of the most souless places in Perth are charging $10-even for a pint of mega swill, so a 60% increase barely leave room for a pack of crisps out of a $20 note....fkthat
 
a middy of crown lager at the raffles is $7 so ive heard
paul
 
Jeez... I remember paying 3 quid a pint in 1996 in a London Pub. A quid inflation over that time aint that bad surely. Last time I had a pint at the Mean Fiddler in Rouse Hill Sydney it were near $8. I guess prices go up..
 
Jeez... I remember paying 3 quid a pint in 1996 in a London Pub. A quid inflation over that time aint that bad surely. Last time I had a pint at the Mean Fiddler in Rouse Hill Sydney it were near $8. I guess prices go up..

Thats true, but thats also london. When I was there in 04 it was anywhere from 3 to 5 squid depending on the pub but when I was out in someset, we could get pints of the local bitter for 1.80. Just like in city a beer might be $5 but in the country its $3.50 A jump from 2.20 like in the article to 4 is a huge jump...

Hopefully next time I make it over the beers will be back to a normal price rather than what they are predicting...
 
To underline the dire state of affairs, Scottish & Newcastle - responsible for three of Europe's top ten beers including Foster's and Kronenbourg - today confirmed price increases in 2008 "way above the rate of inflation". The company has fingered higher aluminium, cereal and crude oil costs as the cause, the Guardian explains.

So thet's what gives Fosters it's special taste. <_<

Campbell
 
:lol:

Yeah but what be scarier? If they actually put that in it or that is one of Europes top 10 beers? Personally, I reckon it's only fit for serving up hot to your MIL at Christmas lunch
 
I lived in Durham for 2 years and my local (The Colpitts) sold pints of hand pulled ordinary bitter for 1.26. That was just over 12 months ago now, but it was the cheapest pub in town if you exclude the college bars, of which one had a 70p/pint policy. Hope it doesnt go up cos i reckon it will take something away from the pub culture that exists in england. A few cheeky pints on the way home from work is an institution and one i adhered to!
 
Rest assured good people that despite the fact that only two people visit our forum that Pyssedas Heavy Industrial has written to the British Prime Minister with suggestions on how to lower the price of British Beer - we have even had something of a response!

Here is a small portion of what we sent:

To Gordon Brown,
Prime Minister of England
10 Downing St
London Etc

Re: Falling beer sales in Britain

Dear Gordon,

We here at Pyssedas Heavy Industrial write to you with fear in our hearts and our trousers following the news from the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) that beer sales in your fine country are dropping rapidly. We hope to make some suggestions which might assist you in reversing this problem and thus lead to a warm feeling in the bellies of your citizens.

But first a word of caution. Beware! Mr Rob Haywood, the chief executive of the BBPA has called for a tax freeze on beer. While we have the greatest respect for Mr Haywood, and his knees which even from this distance are clearly amongst the finest in England, we would question his understanding of the basic laws of physics. For reasons that currently escape us when a liquid is changed to a solid through the freezing process (as we here in Australia refer to it), an expansion of the space it occupies occurs. Thus were ones government to place a freeze on beer one might very well find that the kegs, barrels, bottles and cans containing it would explode. (Actually the barrels might not, but anyway.) Clearly if such an explosion was to happen in a private fridge containing only a few bottles while the loss of beer would be regrettable the nation could soldier on. If however the entire countrys beer was frozen, and in turn exploded, there could well be rioting and gnashing of teeth of biblical proportions.


The rest of the letter, and similar letters to the Reserve Bank of Australia & Fosters about the price-hike in VB, and a letter to a man in India who was going to make hexagonal cast-iron beer kegs can be found here: http://www.pyssedas.com/forum/forum.asp?FORUM_ID=7

Please proceed in an orderly and slow pace to the site - as a small forum if too many people visit at once the string that drives our servers could snap and the mouse could be garotted in his wheel
 

Latest posts

Back
Top