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Journal Article

Citation

Adrian M, Ferguson BS, Her M. J. Stud. Alcohol 1996; 57(4): 434-448.

Affiliation

Social Evaluation and Research Department, Addiction Research Foundation, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1996, Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8776686

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine if allowing wine sales in corner grocery stores, beginning in 1978 for domestic Quebec wines and then in 1983 for imported wines, in addition to sales in government monopoly stores, led to an increase in alcohol consumption. METHOD: Aggregate retail sales data for the period 1953 to 1990 were analyzed using econometric regression techniques. Time series (unit root) analysis and structural modeling were used to take into account the effect of price, income and other social, economic and demographic factors in order to determine the effect of factors underlying consumption behavior in both the long and short term. RESULTS: In the post-intervention period, wine consumption continued along the rising trend established in the pre-intervention period, with an apparent shift in favor of domestic wine consumption. The increase in wine consumption was highest in the period immediately following privatization, but the increase eventually dampened down within a few years. There was no fundamental change in the responsiveness of wine consumption to price. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that the level of wine consumption can be controlled through price changes when alcohol availability increases through increased sales outlets.


Language: en

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