consumption and alcohol-related harm in the 1970s, an event that surprised all the planners of reform who had
expected that better availability of beer would lead to reduced consumption of
stronger beverages and more
moderate drinking patterns. The experience of the early 1970s showed that the control of availability of
alcoholic beverages has a strong impact on the prevention of alcohol-related harm. It was however politically
impossible to return to a more restrictive control system.
Today the state Alcohol Monopoly is still working although Finland joined the EU in 1995, gaining official
acceptance in Brussels on the basis that its aim is to protect public health. There has been continuous pressure
by alcohol industries towards further liberalisation of the system, e.g. allowing wine to be sold in grocery stores,
but no big changes have been implemented so far.
The alcohol issue was back on the public agenda again with the alcohol taxation reform of 2004, in which
Finland found it necessary tower alcohol taxes due to the neighboring Estonia joining the EU and also because
EU rules required a more liberal policy on tourist importation of alcohol. Alcohol consumption and
alcohol-related
harm consequently leaped upwards, causing much concern among the general public and politicians. As a
consequence, the tax reduction was cancelled by a stepwise procedure of consecutive tax increases.
In 2017, the Parliament is discussing the Government’s proposal for a new Alcohol Act. It would extend the
sales of strong beer and some other beverages from the Monopoly to grocery stores. There is some dispute
about the effects of the reform on alcohol-consumption and alcohol-related harm, most experts believing in a rise
in consumption and harm. The government emphasizes mostly economic benefits
for alcohol industries,
employment and taxation.
The importance of the alcohol issue in Finnish politics is revealed by the fact that there have been only two
referendums in the country since it became independent in 1917. The first one was in 1931 on prohibition, and
the second one on EU membership in 1994. The monopoly system has faced many new challenges in the
globalisation process, but has survived, even though Finland has been an EU member country over two
decades.
Jussi Simpura, Research professor (emeritus), visiting researcher,
National Institute for Health and Welfare
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