Monday, 23 February 2015

Beer consumption per capita 1976 – 2004

It turns out arsing wasn’t  problem. So here are figures for the intervening years. Or at least some of them.

My apologies for their incompleteness. The different sources I’ve used have different subsets of countries, hence the holes in certain places. A word of warning, too: the figures don’t always use the figure for population. Some only includes those of legal drinking age, others over-16’s and others the whole population. Unfortunately, some sources don’t bother to say which population figure they’ve used.

Here are the tables (a single table is too wide):

Beer consumption per capita 1976 - 2004
Country 1976 1980 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1993
Belgium 143 131 128 126.3 121 119.8 122 119 115 121 108
West Germany 147 145.9 148.6 144.4 145.4 156.4 144.2 144 143
East Germany 118 - 146.7 142.2 141.6 142.1 143 143 -
Germany 138
Australia 142 - 117.8 114.5 115.5 111.3 111 113 - - 96
New Zealand 133 - 114 116.9 115.2 120.8 122 115 - - -
United Kingdom 126 121.7 108 108.4 77 77.3 94 94 90 - 112.6
Austria 104 101.9 109.4 107.7 111.6 118.5 118.3 118 - - 118
Denmark 128 130.7 133.9 129.7 121.2 125.7 125 125 127 - 126
Switzerland 71 69.5 70.3 68.6 69.2 69.4 69.3 69 - - 65.5
Canada 86 - 83.5 82.7 81.6 81.1 82 83 - - 71
United States 82 - 92 90.7 90.3 90.8 90.1 89 - - 86
France - 44.3 - - - 38 39 - - - 39
Sweden 60 47.4 - - - 47 52 - - - 64
Netherlands 73 86.4 87.5 83.4 84.5 86 84.3 83 88 - 85
Norway - 48.1 - - - 49 - - - - 50
Italy - 16.7 - - - 18 23 - - - 25.1


Beer consumption per capita 1976 - 2004
Country 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Belgium 106 106 102 101 98 100 99 98 96 96 93
West Germany
East Germany
Germany 139 137.7 131.7 131.2 127.4 127.5 125.5 123.1 - 117.7
Australia - - 95.3 94.7 94.5
New Zealand - - - - 84.7 - - - - -
United Kingdom 112.6 112.7 118 123.7 124.2 126 125 125 - 118
Austria 117 115.6 116 113.2 108.1 108.9 108 106.9 - 110.6
Denmark 126 124.4 117.6 116.7 107.7 104.6 102 99 - 96.2
Switzerland 64.8 64.5 60.6 59.5 59.9 58.8 58.3 57 - 58.7
Canada - - - - - - - - - -
United States - - - - 82 - 82 81 - -
France 39.3 39.1 39.6 37 38.6 38.7 36.2 36 - 35.5
Sweden 67.3 64.5 59 61.7 57.3 59.3 58.4 55 - 55.4
Netherlands 85 86 85.1 86.4 84.3 84.4 82.8 83 - 78.8
Norway 50.5 52.5 52.6 52.9 49.7 52 52 51 52 50.6
Italy 26.2 25.4 24 25.4 26.9 27.1 28 29 - 30.1
Sources:
World Guide to Beer, Michael Jackson,
Bier in Belgie, Geert van Lierde,
Larousse la bière,
The Confederation of Belgian Brewers.
Economics Department, German Brewers' Association.
Brauwelt Brevier 2000
Brauwelt 31-32/2002
Bryggeriforeningen (Norway)
Brauwelt 18/2004 page .513
Brauwelt 3/2004, page 86
Brauwelt 22/2004, page 651
The Brewers of Europe (2003)
Centraal Brouwerij Kantoor
Het Brouwersblad June 2004. p.6
Deutscher Brauer-Bund, Bonn
Brauwelt Brevier 2005, p.20
1988 Brewers' Almanack, page 67.
Het Brouwersblad June 2005. p.7


This is only a subset of the full table that includes so many countries that it’s rather unwieldy. Though you never know, I might be arsed to publish it in full.

It’s fascinating to note when beer consumption peaked in the different countries. Though as I don’t have figures for every single year it’s not 100% pinned down. Germany 1986, Belgium 1976, Australia 1976, New Zealand 1976, UK 1976 and 1999, Austria 1986, Denmark 1983, Switzerland 1963, Canada 1976, USA 1983, France 1980, Sweden 1994, Netherlands 1989, Norway 2010 and 2011, Italy 2003.

As you can see, in most of the traditional beer-drinking countries the peak was in the 1970’s or 1980’s. Outliers are Switzerland with 1963 and Norway and Italy, the only two countries with a peak in the 21st century.

I’m sure you pick more out of the numbers. Like Austria’s level of consumption being quite constant, the UK’s being up and down, but in most of the West a slow, steady decline for the last 20 years.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I wonder if the big drop in consumption in Australia and NZ is related to the growth in that region's wine production. I seem to recall the quantity and quality of local wine went up a lot during those years.