Vikings in the piazza
Jan. 8th, 2005 03:18 amFrom http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3536125:
"Britain's cities are already among the booziest in the world, and the worry is that they will become more alcohol-sodden once the old restrictions are done away with. The new act addresses some fears by giving local authorities more powers to move against troublesome pubs. But as Andrew McNeill, director of the Institute for Alcohol Studies, an independent think-tank, puts it, “It's not that the Pig & Whistle is badly managed. The problem is that there are 40 Pig & Whistles in a tiny area.”
"Drink has become more of a problem partly because Britons are drinking more. The average adult consumed 11.2 litres of pure alcohol last year—12% more than when Labour came to power, and more than twice as much as in the middle of the 20th century. While most Europeans have cut back in recent years and Americans continue in their moderate ways, the British and Irish are both on seemingly unstoppable benders.
"But the real problem is the way Britons drink. Like Scandinavians, they like to get very drunk, but their drinking habits are as sociable as more moderate Mediterranean tipplers. British institutions such as the round and the pub crawl encourage group boozing and clusters of outlets—a trend that has accelerated since the early 1990s as a result of more liberal licensing. The hope was that allowing people to drink when and where they want would encourage self-restraint. The effect so far has been akin to letting Vikings loose in the piazza."
"Britain's cities are already among the booziest in the world, and the worry is that they will become more alcohol-sodden once the old restrictions are done away with. The new act addresses some fears by giving local authorities more powers to move against troublesome pubs. But as Andrew McNeill, director of the Institute for Alcohol Studies, an independent think-tank, puts it, “It's not that the Pig & Whistle is badly managed. The problem is that there are 40 Pig & Whistles in a tiny area.”
"Drink has become more of a problem partly because Britons are drinking more. The average adult consumed 11.2 litres of pure alcohol last year—12% more than when Labour came to power, and more than twice as much as in the middle of the 20th century. While most Europeans have cut back in recent years and Americans continue in their moderate ways, the British and Irish are both on seemingly unstoppable benders.
"But the real problem is the way Britons drink. Like Scandinavians, they like to get very drunk, but their drinking habits are as sociable as more moderate Mediterranean tipplers. British institutions such as the round and the pub crawl encourage group boozing and clusters of outlets—a trend that has accelerated since the early 1990s as a result of more liberal licensing. The hope was that allowing people to drink when and where they want would encourage self-restraint. The effect so far has been akin to letting Vikings loose in the piazza."
re: drinking in eng-a-lund
Date: 2005-01-08 02:08 pm (UTC)that being said ...
my husband & i took all our prenatal classes recently and discovered this fun fact from a couple who spent the first five or so months of their pregnancy in the u.k.: apparently, in the classes there, they recommend that you drink "only a pint or two per day" and that you "moderate" your smoking, presumably based in large part on the trend identified in your post! we were fascinated ... while i'm not completely opposed to a glass of red wine while p.g., two pints of guinness would pretty much get me looped!
it's different over there, i tell you ...
Re: drinking in eng-a-lund
Date: 2005-01-08 10:04 pm (UTC)Hi, nice to "meet" you. :)
it's different over there, i tell you ...
Yah, what they consider normal is pretty amazing. Then again, they think we're pretty weirdly puritanical when it comes to a lot of things.
Cheers! :)