Strict alcohol laws or lax, final effect is the same
From the “Economist’s” Nordic correspondent
The Danes think the Swedes and Finns, their northern neighbours, are either dead drunk or dead sober. This national typecasting is unpleasantly close to the truth. When the new year binge is over and they stop pouring akvavit and vodka abruptly down their gullets, quite a lot of Finns and Swedes will be plain dead of alcohol poisoning. The Danes, in exchange, are regarded by the Swedes apd Finns as a happy-go-lucky lot who never let the last glass of lager evaporate before they start on the next. The Danes do, indeed, love the beer that is one of their most successful exports. Their seasonal excess of it is unlikely to condemn many of them to sudden death, but it catches up with them in the end. Although these three Nordic countries have different drinking habits and even more different drinking laws, alcohol causes about as many fatalities in each of them. In 1984, for every 10,000 adults, alcohol-related sicknesses killed 19 people in both Deifmark and Finland, and 21 in Sweden. For the Finns and Swedes, drink is sudden death. Acute alcohol poisoning killed 274
people in Finland (population: 4.9 million), and 304 people in Sweden (population: 8.4 million).
The Danes (5.1 million) kill themselves more slowly. Danes aged 15 and over drink, on average, the equivalent of 12 litres of pure alcohol each year; seven as beer, three as wine, two as spirits. They suffered only 50 deaths from alcohol poisoning; but cirrhosis of the liver killed 618 Danes in 1984, compared with 316 Finns and 680 Swedes. It all ended up much the same. These gloomy statistics were published by the Swedish Social Affairs Agency to damp down the festive spirit. They have
refuelled the interminable argument about whether people are better served by the extremely restrictive alcohol policies of Sweden and Finland, or by Denmark’s extreme liberality on the same subject. In the two northern countries, sale of wine and spirits is restricted to State-monopoly outlets. In all of Sweden, there are only 320 — one for every 26,000 people. The Finns have 212, one for 23,000. For roughly every 300 Danes, by contrast, there is a liquor store (nobody is sure of the exact number, since they do not even have to be licensed)'. Copyright — “The Economist”
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Press, 14 January 1987, Page 14
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396Strict alcohol laws or lax, final effect is the same Press, 14 January 1987, Page 14
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