Though the new pricing would mean that drinks with high alcohol content currently being sold cheaply would go up in price, most premium brands would stay the same, she said. “It’s not the same as a price hike for all alcohol across all products.”
Some critics of the measure said it would unfairly penalize poorer people and those struggling with alcohol abuse.
“A flat tax of any kind is going to disproportionately affect those families on the lower scale of the economic pyramid,” said Róisín Nic Lochlainn, the student union president at the National University of Ireland, Galway. “It’s not going to stop people buying alcohol. It’s just going to push people further into poverty, especially people who live with addictions.”
Many students rushed to shops on Monday to stock up on cheaper alcohol before the measure came into effect, she said.
Drinks Ireland, a lobbying group representing producers of Irish alcohol and brands, said retailers would be responsible for implementing the new law. “As with any new public health intervention, there will be a need to review and evaluate this policy measure for effectiveness.”
With the new rule, Ireland is following in the footsteps of neighbors like Scotland, which became the first nation to introduce minimum pricing for alcohol in 2018, and Wales in 2020.
Experts say the impacts of minimum pricing on alcohol are still being examined. But researchers from the University of Sheffield and Public Health Scotland have already found that the policy in Scotland led to a significant decrease in alcohol consumption among those with a dependence on the substance, according to a report last year.