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Aussies hit the bottle to see out pandemic

Tiffanie TurnbullAAP
Alcohol sales spiked in all months impacted by the pandemic, but May saw the biggest increase with turnover almost one and half times 2019 levels.
Camera IconAlcohol sales spiked in all months impacted by the pandemic, but May saw the biggest increase with turnover almost one and half times 2019 levels. Credit: Supplied

Australians hit the bottle with gusto while at home during the pandemic, drinking an unprecedented amount of alcohol and bumping retail alcohol sales to record levels.

Data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics shows supermarkets, takeaway shops and the like turned over a record $15.6 billion in alcohol sales in 2020.

That’s an increase of 26.7 per cent or $3.3b more than in 2019.

In comparison, alcohol sales grew by $195 million between 2018 and 2019 — about 6 per cent of the increase recorded between 2019 and 2020.

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Predatory marketing targeting Australians during a time of heightened anxiety is to blame, chief executive of the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education Caterina Giorgi says.

“During COVID-19 we’ve seen alcohol retailers and online delivery companies engage in prolific marketing that promotes using alcohol as a way to cope during the pandemic,” she said.

“The increase seen by alcohol retailers suggests it’s working for them.”

Alcohol sales spiked in all months impacted by the pandemic, but May saw the biggest increase with turnover almost one and half times 2019 levels.

In December alone alcohol retail stores, 65 per cent of which are owned by supermarket giants Coles and Woolworths, turned over almost $2b, making it the highest earning month in Australian history.

The whopping increase is great for retailers, Ms Giorgi says, but pretty terrible for Australian health outcomes.

“Companies should not be able to use a global health crisis as an opportunity to sell more alcoholic products at the detriment of the health of Australians,” she said.

“We’ve heard from family violence services that they’ve seen an increase in alcohol involvement in family violence and also heard from alcohol and other drug treatment services that they’re seeing more people reach out for help with alcohol.”

With the retail alcohol sector’s marketing largely unregulated, oversight is desperately needed, she says.

Ms Giorgi is also calling for limits on late night and rapid online alcohol delivery, and for a boost in funding for alcohol and drug services to reduce alcohol-fuelled harm.

AAP

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