Gnomebrewer
Member
- Joined
- 2/8/14
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- 12
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- 6
I was talking to someone about alcohol taxes this morning, and got to thinking about cheap imported beers. As most who've gone to a bottleshop looking for a cheap lager would know, imported macro lagers are now often cheaper than Aussies. In particular, at the moment I can get 'Tun Bitter' at $30 for a 30 can block. How can they do it? Do they get a tax rebate, or pay less tax than Aussie made beers? That's unfair if they do. Looking at the maths:
30 cans @ 330mL per can and 4%ABV means 30x0.33x0.04=0.396L of alcohol
Tax on bottled/canned beer over 3.5% is $50.40 per litre. So that's 0.396x50.40=$19.96 on a block of Tun.
GST on a $30 sale is $2.73, so tax on the block of Tun Bitter is $19.96+$2.73 = $22.69.
That leaves $7.31 out of the sale to pay for the beer/brewing, canning, distribution (from Belgium), marketing, bottle shop profits, brewery profits etc. I just don't see how that's possible - am I missing something? How are our local breweries supposed to compete with that? I haven't tried Tun Bitter, maybe it's sh$$house, but that's kind of irrelevent.
30 cans @ 330mL per can and 4%ABV means 30x0.33x0.04=0.396L of alcohol
Tax on bottled/canned beer over 3.5% is $50.40 per litre. So that's 0.396x50.40=$19.96 on a block of Tun.
GST on a $30 sale is $2.73, so tax on the block of Tun Bitter is $19.96+$2.73 = $22.69.
That leaves $7.31 out of the sale to pay for the beer/brewing, canning, distribution (from Belgium), marketing, bottle shop profits, brewery profits etc. I just don't see how that's possible - am I missing something? How are our local breweries supposed to compete with that? I haven't tried Tun Bitter, maybe it's sh$$house, but that's kind of irrelevent.