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New FDA Rule: Alcohol Calorie Info Required on Restaurant Menus

December 3, 2014
Three years after the original proposal, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) issued a final rule on December 1 that requires restaurants to publish calorie information for alcoholic beverages that are standard menu items listed on a menu or menu board. The final rule is a win for the public and the availability of alcohol product information, as the FDA originally stated that alcoholic beverages would not be covered. The rule goes into effect on December 1, 2015.

Alcohol comprises as much as one-fifth of adult calorie consumption in the U.S. Per the FDA FAQ page for this rule, the majority of comments the FDA received supported covering alcohol due to its impacts on public health. In 2011 Alcohol Justice (then Marin Institute) urged the FDA to adopt a menu labeling requirement at restaurants and similar retail food establishments. Read our 2011 letter to the FDA here.


Alcohol & State Budget Policy in KY

December 3, 2014

A New York Times post recently implied that the state of Kentucky can pull itself out of a financial hole by selling more whiskey, citing recent state policy eliminating many alcohol taxes and fees. What the NYT neglected to mention is the already-enormous economic burden of excessive alcohol consumption and the potential public health impact of increasing production (and therefore consumption) in the state. And while it mentioned that a few states have passed alcohol excise tax increases in the last several years, it also failed to differentiate why raising taxes is a completely different policy option than promoting alcohol production and sales, one that protects public health and is likely to have a more significant impact on state budgets.

Here is the economic reality of alcohol's cost in Kentucky:

  • The cost of excessive alcohol consumption costs the state $2.8 billion in economic harm, or $657 per person.

  • The proportion of this cost directly borne by government is $1.2 billion.

  • Combined federal and excise tax revenues cover just 18% of the direct government cost.

  • There are 1,351 alcohol-attributable deaths in Kentucky each year.

Kentucky's situation is similar in most other states; median economic harm is $2.9 billion annually, and governments must cover 42% of these costs, despite diminishing excise tax revenues. Excise taxes are rarely increased at the state or federal level, and almost never indexed for inflation, so inflation erosion exacerbates the problem of already too-low tax rates. At the federal level, between 1991 (the last time the federal excise tax was increased) and 2011, alcohol sales revenues increased by 129%, while excise tax revenues by only 40%. This has added up to $65 billion in federal revenue lost, now up up to $7 billion each year.

Given the staggering economic cost of excessive consumption, raising alcohol excise taxes makes much more sense than a policy investing in alcohol industry promotion. Raising alcohol excise taxes is the most effective public health intervention to prevent excessive alcohol consumption and related harm, as well as providing a rich source of revenue for state coffers. A $0.25 per-drink increase in Kentucky's alcohol excise tax would create more than 5200 new jobs without increasing alcohol-related harm and its associated costs. It would also bring in $330,000,000 in additional tax revenue to the state.

The NYT post is a chorus out of the whiskey and craft beer songbook, painting alcohol producers as saviors of the state economy. It echoes alcohol industry PR machines such as the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (DISCUS) and the Beer Institute, and gives credence to misleading claims that alcohol production provides a net gain for the economy by creating jobs. It also sounds and looks a lot like information provided to journalists when they were treated to an all-expenses paid Spring Break party by DISCUS earlier this year.





New CDC Study: Most Excessive Drinkers Are Not Alcoholics

December 3, 2014

Recent research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) indicates that only 1 out of 10 Americans who drink excessively are dependent on alcohol.

The CDC defines excessive consumption as 8 standard drinks a week for women, and 15 for men. Drinking at these levels causes 88,000 deaths in the U.S. annually, and significantly increases the risk of liver cirrhosis, several types of cancer, traffic crashes, injuries, and suicide. Excessive consumption results in $223.5 billion a year in economic damage in the U.S.

Robert Brewer, Alcohol Program Lead in the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, points out that the study results indicate problem drinking is an issue for a much larger population than previously thought, and that evidence-based prevention strategies such as increasing alcohol prices and reducing alcohol outlet density can help to ameliorate the problem.