Baby boomers are keeping booze Britain afloat but the young are drinking less


(MENAFN- The Conversation) It looks like sobriety is having a moment in the spotlight, withdrinking ratesaround the world on the decline – particularly among young people. In the UK, the amount of alcohol consumed per person actually peaked in themid-2000sand seems to have been decreasing ever since. But is this the case for everyone?

Researchers have observed that young people across the UK are drinking less, as shown in arecent reportfrom the University of Sheffield. The report highlights a number of changes in drinking habits over the last ten to 15 years. These include lower consumption and drunkenness levels among young people – with abstinence rates among 16-24 year-olds on the rise from 10% to nearly 25% between 2001 and 2016.

AHealth Survey for Englandproviding a snapshot of drinking patterns in 2017 also revealed only 44% of this age group had drunk in the past week. This figure was nearly 70% when the survey was conducted in 2002. These trends are broadly replicated acrossother countries in Europeand even as far afield asAustralia .

There's also, arguably, been something of a cultural shift in the way many people view drinking and abstinence. Alongside declines in drinking and drunkenness, young people today also haveless positive attitudes towards alcoholthan previous generations.




Meeting for a coffee rather than a beer?
DisobeyArt/Shutterstock

Globally, there's also been a rise of 'positive sobriety' or 'mindful drinking' movements, particularly in the form of online communities, support groups and blogs. The popularClub Sodamovement in the UK hosts 'mindful drinking events' and festivals showcasing the increasing number of alcohol-free beverages available as the low- and no-alcohol drinks market expands. Meanwhile,online communitiesprovide spaces to make sobriety more visible, normalised and celebrated.

'Dry months' such asDry January and Dry Julyhave also grown considerably in popularity over recent years.Some researcheven suggests that participating in these months off alcohol can lead to decreased alcohol consumption in the future.

Stories charting positive experiences of long and short-term sobriety are also going mainstream. Arecent articlein The Guardian charts the 'ridiculously, unexpectedly good' experience the author had upon giving up drinking for a month. It has prompted over 650 comments, with readers sharing their own potentially 'life-changing' experiences of sobriety.

It would be easy then to think that attitudes to alcohol are changing – and that the UK and other parts of the world are starting to develop 'healthier' relationships with alcohol. But digging a little deeper reveals that this is only a partial picture of the UK's drinking habits.


Boozy boomers

Indeed, the notable declines in drinking among young people are not necessarily replicated across older generations. In the UK, for example, the55-64 age group– often referred to asthe baby boomer generation– remains the most likely to drink heavily and theleast likely to abstain from alcohol .

Abstinence has alsodecreased by 5% in the over-65ssince 2005. Overall, the last 20-30 years have actually seenincreasesin drinking rates among middle-aged and older populations – particularly in women over 25 and in Northern Ireland.

So rather than a universal decline in alcohol consumption, it may be more accurate to say there has been a ' polarisation ' around drinking in recent years. Overall, consumption levels have dropped, but the increasing numbers of irregular, light or non-drinkers may behiding ongoing heavy and binge drinkingamong some young people and older drinkers.


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For example, the 4% of the population who drink most heavilypurchase around 30% of all alcohol sold in the UK . Anddeaths related to alcohol use or misusewere at the highest they've been in a decade in 2017 – with alcohol-related hospital admissions 67% higher than 10 years ago.

Alongside this, social class andwhere you livecan still have a big impact on the way you drink. Consumption levels in Scotland, parts of northern and south west England are higher than those in London and south east England, for example.

So in actual fact it looks like what is happening is that the young are drinking in less risky ways than previous generations, but older people are still continuing to drink heavily. And there is a growing polarisation between light and non-drinkers and the heaviest drinkers.

It's clear then that the dynamics of drinking culture in the UK are complex – and while it might not be the end of ' booze Britain ' just yet, for the younger generations at least, it seems as though things are heading in the right direction.



    Alcohol
    Baby boomers
    Health
    Drinking
    Millennials
    Gen Z


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