Average Canadian will spend more than $85 on wine, beer and spirits in December
By The Canadian Press - Friday, December 7, 2012 - 0 Comments
Canadians are expected to raise their glasses many times this holiday season with alcohol…
Canadians are expected to raise their glasses many times this holiday season with alcohol sales on track to set a record high this month and also for 2012, says a new report.
The average Canadian adult will spend more than $85 on booze in December, which translates to about one bottle of spirits, three bottles of wine and 27 bottles of beer, according to the BMO Holiday “Spirits” report.
“If the strength we’ve seen so far persists through the holiday season, then the industry is on track for a very strong and probably a record year,” BMO economist Aaron Goertzen said Friday.
Annual alcohol sales in Canada are expected to top $19 billion this year, about 38 per cent or $700 million higher than in 2011, he said.
By comparison, the retail sector as a whole is usually up 15 per cent to 20 per cent from holiday shopping, the report said.
Sales of spirits, wine and beer typically surge in December, making it the highest volume sales month, Goertzen said from Toronto.
“So we’re looking for a jump of around 40 per cent compared to the annual average as people are hosting get togethers and purchasing gifts for family and friends and enjoying the holiday spirit,” he said.
That increase will be about the same as last December, he added.
The report also said Quebecers have shown the most pronounced increase in holiday spending on alcohol, with sales rising about 65 per cent above average in December.
“With Quebec being particularly high consumers of wine as opposed to other types of alcohol that could have a particular benefit for growing Canadian wineries,” Goertzen said.
Ontarians will increase their booze spending by 45 per cent in December, which should benefit Ontario wine makers whose brands have a strong presence on store shelves in the province, the report said.
British Columbians will only increase holiday spending on booze by 30 per cent, lower than the national average of about 40 per cent, the report said.
The increase in spending on alcohol comes as the economy continues to improve and wine and beer producers continue to make new inroads, the report said.
“The Canadian economy has grown this year, employment has grown, incomes have grown and this is going to support consumption on all fronts, including alcohol sales,” Goertzen said.
On Friday, Statistics Canada report that Canada’s economy showed surprising bounce last month when 59,300 jobs were added, dropping the unemployment rate two-tenths of a point to 7.2 per cent.
The jobs report from Statistics Canada was among the strongest of the year, not only in terms of job creation, but also in the type of jobs — almost all the gains were in full-time employment and in the private sector.
BMO’s Goertzen said Canadians still tend to drink more beer than other types of liquor, but the wine industry is benefiting from an aging population.
“Older consumers tend to have an appreciation for an interest in finer types of wines and they tend to have the means to shell out for a nice bottle, and are inclined do that.”
A recent BMO report on Canada’s wine industry said that a third of wine consumed in Canada is produced by domestic wineries.
Consumers bought an average of 22 bottles of wine in 2011, up from 13 in 1995, that report also said.
Wine has drained away market share from beer and spirits to the point where it’s a third of all alcohol consumption in Canada, the recent report said.
Over the 1995 to 2011 period, wine rose from 18 per cent to 30 per cent of Canadians’ total alcohol consumption, while beer fell from 53 per cent to 45 per cent and spirits fell from 29 per cent to 25 per cent.
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Uncle Dan’s ‘not feeling well,’ kids
By Julia McKinnell - Monday, December 22, 2008 at 9:00 AM - 2 Comments
Experts offer tips on how to handle alcoholic siblings during the festive holiday season

“Christmas is a great time for a drunk,” says a recovering alcoholic from Ontario. “I could go out at a moment’s notice for ‘more ribbon’ or smuggle home large bottles of vodka with the bundles of Christmas presents.” Not only that, but no one at Christmas ever questions a locked door: “Everyone thought I needed privacy to wrap their gifts.” Christmas may be great for drunks but at least one brother in British Columbia is dreading a repeat of his older brother’s annual drunken shenanigans on Christmas Day at his parents’ place. “It’s a huge problem. I’ve tried confronting him to disastrous effect,” says Kevin in Vancouver, whose brother starts each day with a joint and rum in his coffee. “Telling him not to drink fuels the fire, and as a result, he drinks more. My poor mother.”
Now there’s a book of advice for the brothers and sisters of alcoholics, including how to cope with a sibling’s drinking over the holidays. To start with, the time to negotiate behaviour is before Christmas, not at the dinner table, says Patricia Olsen, co-author, along with Dr. Petros Levounis, of Sober Siblings: How to Help Your Alcoholic Brother or Sister—and Not Lose Yourself. “It’s futile trying to have a conversation with someone under the influence,” writes Olsen, adding on the phone last week that it’s even more hopeless if the person is in denial (Olsen grew up with two alcoholic brothers). When Kevin in Vancouver challenged his sibling last Christmas about his drinking, “he ordered me out of his house.”










