Minimum unit pricing of alcohol expected to rise to 65p

Health Secretary Michael Matheson is due to update Holyrood on the Scottish Government's plans on Thursday.

Author: Vanessa WalkerPublished 8th Feb 2024

Scottish ministers are expected to announce an increase in the minimum unit pricing (MUP) of alcohol later today.

The policy was first introduced in May 2018, setting the minimum price at which a drink can be sold in Scotland.

Since then, alcohol has had to be sold at a minimum price of 50p per unit.

A sunset clause on the legislation means the current regulations will expire at the end of April this year, and ministers have been consulting on increasing the MUP to 65p.

Health campaigners are urging the Scottish Government to "do the right thing for public health" and impose an increase, stressing the current MUP has been "eroded" over the years.

Health Secretary Michael Matheson is due to update Holyrood on the Scottish Government's plans on Thursday.

Ahead of his statement, Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems (Shaap), which represents frontline doctors, urged politicians to increase the MUP.

The group said alcohol is linked to three deaths a day in Scotland, with almost 100 people hospitalised every day because of drink.

Shaap chairman Dr Alastair MacGilchrist said there is "clear evidence" minimum pricing has been effective.

The consultant liver specialist said Shaap "as an organisation representing doctors who work on the front line, we understand how essential MUP is in tackling Scotland's alcohol crisis".

But he said the current level of the MUP is "now too low to work at its optimum in saving lives".

He added: "We are hopeful that at this critical point, Scotland's politicians do the right thing for public health and vote for it to continue and be uprated."

Alcohol Focus Scotland also backed an increase to 65p, with chief executive Alison Douglas saying keeping it at 50p would mean the "positive effects" of the policy would be reversed.

She said: "Alcohol Focus Scotland and more than 30 other organisations, including medical colleges, public health professionals and children's charities, have been campaigning for the minimum unit price to be increased to at least 65p per unit to combat the recent rise in alcohol deaths, and the impact of the pandemic.

"Hundreds of people are alive today because of minimum unit pricing, while thousands of hospital admissions have been averted. This is both good for people's health and relieves pressure on our NHS.

"To keep it at the current level of 50p would mean the positive effects we've seen will be reversed, condemning hundreds more people and families to unnecessary suffering and loss."

However, the Institute for Economic Affairs think tank said an increase would result in Scots having to pay more for alcohol.

Christopher Snowdon, head of lifestyle economics, said: "With deaths from alcohol abuse at a 14-year high, it is obvious that minimum pricing is not an evidence-based policy.

"The official evaluation overwhelmingly showed that the policy has failed but it is a political project and the Scottish Government was always going to stick with it, come what may.

"Scottish drinkers have paid dearly for the folly of minimum pricing and they will now have to pay even more."