Saturday, May 02, 2009

Six-pack of beer will rise $3 under B.C. NDP: retailers

CBC NEWS (Full story) Friday, May 1, 2009

The proverbial Joe Six-Pack now has at least one good reason to sit up and pay attention to the B.C. election campaign — some B.C. NDP campaign promises might lead to higher beer prices, according to beer and wine retailers. An industry group representing 690 beer and wine stores in B.C. says two promises made by the NDP during the provincial election campaign could combine to push the cost of a $12 six-pack of beer to $15, with similar prices increase for bottles of wine. B.C. NDP leader Carole James has promised to raise B.C.'s minimum wage from $8 for regular workers and $6 for trainees to $10 across the board as part of her campaign platform for the May 12 provincial election. James has also promised to cut the discount operators of B.C.'s private beer and wine retailers get when they buy alcohol wholesale from the government — from 16 per cent to 10 per cent below the retail price. James says her proposal will dip into the retail stores' big profit margins while providing extra revenue for the government to fund education and health care.

It would also put the private retailers on the same footing as rural grocery stores that sell beer and wine under a different licensing system, allowing all retailers to set their own prices equally, she said. "It's up to them as businesses if they pass that cost on, but it's ensuring there's a level playing field between the public and the private liquor stores," said James on Thursday.

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