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The Case for Wholesale Priced Booze

There's been a lot of discussion in reaction to the Auditor General's Report, which was critical of the LCBO monopoly for its fixed-pricing system. Every other product that is purchased for resale by business owners offers wholesale pricing. Why is this not the case with the LCBO?
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There's been a lot of discussion over the past several days in reaction to the Auditor General Jim McCarter's report, which was critical of the LCBO monopoly for its fixed-pricing system. McCarter asked why such an enormous buyer who presumably would have significant clout in getting best pricing from suppliers would not be doing so?

Licensees in our restaurant and foodservice sectors are forced to pay close to, or in some cases more than, retail prices for the wine, beer and spirits they serve in their establishments. Every other product that is purchased for resale by business owners offers wholesale pricing. Why is this not the case with the LCBO?

The Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association (CRFA) has long been on record opposing LCBO monopoly policies and processes that not only preclude wholesale pricing for the LCBO, but in turn embed a lack of wholesale pricing for licensed Ontario bars and restaurants.

From the restaurant perspective, it makes absolutely no sense. Customers are extremely price-sensitive to any markups on beer, wine, or spirits. It is difficult to imagine we would expect any other industry to operate without access to a wholesale pricing structure which in turns drives retail sales. The restaurant industry simply wants a fair and reasonable true wholesale pricing system.

In 2005, The Beverage Alcohol System Review Panel made a unanimous recommendation to the Government of Ontario to introduce a licensing system that would transition Ontario's beverage alcohol regime away from the LCBO's monopolistic construct towards a more consumer and customer responsive and cost effective privatized model. The Beverage Alcohol Review Panel envisioned a licensing system that would at once bring more accountability and competitiveness to Ontario's beverage alcohol system and more dollars into provincial coffers.

CRFA supports the unanimous recommendation of the expert panel review and recommends a comprehensive review of the current LCBO fixed-pricing system and implementation of a true wholesale pricing regime for Ontario's nearly 17,000 licensed bars and restaurants.

McCarter noted in his report that "[the] LCBO does not sell its products at the lowest prices possible but rather at levels aimed at encouraging responsible consumption and generating profit for the government." As to the notion of "encouraging responsible consumption," we need not look further than the LCBO produced glossy magazine Food & Drink, or LCBO partner AIR MILES customer loyalty program to dispense with this thinly veiled defense of price gouging.

How can we as consumers take this dual positioning seriously: that the government is at once advocating restraint while aggressively promoting alcohol as a key element of a sophisticated branded lifestyle in the pages of Food & Drink and enticing customers with exotic travel and consumer product rewards by racking up points under the AIR MILES loyalty program?

Is the restaurant and foodservice industry important to this government? Does it consider us as a partner in job creation, service delivery and deficit reduction?

If the answer is "Yes," then it is essential that this government make Ontario's restaurant and foodservice industry a top policy priority.

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