skc
Goldmember
- Joined
- 12 August 2008
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A bit off topic I know but I've taken the step away from the big brewers and buy my beer from a local "brew on premesis" place - it's a lot cheaper at around $25 a slab, better for you (no preservatives etc but it does need to be refrigerated at all times), no nasty hangover the next day and I'm supporting a local business.
The place I go has started looking at wine and spirits, and are ready to go at it, though they need to make sure their licence applies to wine and spirits. By all accounts they will be cheaper as well. From what I hear the spirits are "as good as the real thing" but wine is a different kettle of fish as far as I know.
Currenty only around 2 -3% of beer consumed in Aus is 'Craft' while in the US it is closer to 9%, so a lot more room for growth for Australias 200+ microbreweries
That's probably got something to do with the awful state of domestic mass-produced beer in the US. Michelob Ultra anyone? Ewwww...
Cause VB, West End, Carlton Draught, XXXX etc etc are so much better...
Yep, a lot better. They're at least drinkable.
And for God's sake why on Earth is Newkie Brown so popular in America. It's the worst beer out of the UK but they lap it up over there.
Cause VB, West End, Carlton Draught, XXXX etc etc are so much better...
Like Fosters in the UK or Corona in Mexico? (Actually, l haven't seen Fosters on sales in Australia in a while)
11 different rates for taxing alcohol with the difference between many as little as a few cents. :cuckoo:It's all about looking after our health.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/money/cost-o...ne/story-fnagkbpv-1226460583801#ixzz29Fy2cAFY
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I would have been upset to see the price of beer and wine rise to subsidise spirits which are mostly foreign owned.Last week's budget provided $255 Million to spirits distillers by lifting the excise relief cap to $350,000 from $100,000.
Ten years or so ago, Ken Henry's Tax Review recommended a volumetric alcohol tax that would have lowered the tax on a standard drink of the stuff ,but would have jacked it up for beer and wine. The Rudster's government promptly ignored it.
If you've got a taste for spirits, expect to pay $1.11 in taxes for a standard drink, compared with 50 cents for full-strength packaged beer and just 23 cents for wine.
Worldwide, only Iceland and then Norway levies higher alcohol taxes .
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