Average price of a pint of
lager in Britain likely to smash
through £3 barrier by the Summer
As England football fans prepare to flock to pubs around the
country to follow their heroes, they face being hit by a swingeing
16% tax increase on their beloved pint according to new figures
released today by the British Beer and Pub Association.
Chancellor Alistair Darling is already due to increase tax by
4.5% in his March Budget. But following the General Election,
it is widely expected that any new Government would hold another
snap Budget. Top of the list of potential tax rises is an expected
increase in VAT to 20% and a further hike in beer tax by 5%. The
average tax on a pint of lager could then rise from 80 pence now to
an eye-watering 93 pence, pushing the average price of a pint
through the £3 barrier to £3.09. In London, fan face forking
out nearly £4.30 for a pint of lager - with their tax bill from
£1.06 a pint to £1.23
The tax story is just as sour for bitter. The average price of a
pint of bitter could rise to £2.87, with tax increasing from 77
pence to 89 pence a pint. In London a pint of bitter could
hit £3.88, with tax rising from £1.00 a pint to £1.16.
Mark Hastings, Communications Director of the British Beer and
Pub Association said:
"England fans will be crying into their pints by the summer if
these tax hikes go ahead. We are already number 2 in the Beer Tax
world table, winning that competition is one trophy hard-pressed
England footy fans could really do without."