Despite claims the drinks industry is being used as a cash cow by the Treasury, revenue from alcohol duty is at its lowest level for a decade.
Despite claims the drinks industry is being used as a cash cow by the Treasury, revenue from alcohol duty is at its lowest level for a decade.
Official government figures show that in 2007-08, Revenue & Customs collected just under £7.9 billion from drinks duty - an identical figure to that for 1997-98, after inflation is deducted.
That compares to the decade's high-water figure of £9.1 billion in 2004-05, according to Angela Eagle, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, who was responding to a question in the Commons this week posed by Conservative MP Jeremy Hunt.
Alcohol duty's relative contribution to Revenue & Customs coffers is now marginally lower than at any time in the past five years, according to the data. I
It contributed 1.8% of HMRC revenues in 2007-08, a figure which has gradually fallen from 2.2% in 2003-04. The current figure is expected to see modest growth in the next two years, Eagle said.