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Storm in a wine glass

If the top brass at Systembolaget thought their openness would draw to a close the daily reports of bribery and corruption in the ranks, they were very much mistaken.

With Friday’s front page picture revealing the pressures on the company’s chairman, Olof Johansson, and chief executive, Anitra Steen, Svenska Dagbladet takes the view that these two at least have the confidence of their board.

According to the paper, an internal investigation found that although “many employees at Systembolaget’s head office have had contact with suppliers which contravenes company policy” there is not “a culture of impropriety” in the organisation.

Nevertheless, Svenska Dagbladet gently reminded its readers that throughout the 90s Systembolaget staff were given holidays, concert tickets and (shock!) free booze by suppliers.

There was no such restraint in Expressen’s Friday leader. The finding that Systembolaget’s elite are innocent of any wrongdoing is, it said, “self-deception of enormous proportions”. If there is corruption then it is because “the management has created a framework that leads to corruption…and it’s going to happen again”. Just as inevitable is the leader’s conclusion. “A monopoly of one in an otherwise free market always leads to shady business in one form or another. The surest way to prevent such a mess is to abolish both the company and the monopoly on sales.”

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Spain has second highest rate of daily alcohol drinkers in EU 

More than one in ten Spaniards drink alcohol every day, making them the Europeans who drink most regularly after the Portuguese, new Eurostat data reveals. 

Spain has second highest rate of daily alcohol drinkers in EU 
Photo: Cristina Quicler/AFP

Thirteen percent of people in Spain drink alcohol every day, a similar rate to Italy, where 12 percent enjoy a tipple on a daily basis, and only behind Portugal, where 20 percent of people have an alcoholic drink seven days a week.

That puts Spaniards above the EU average of 8.4 percent daily drinkers, data published by Eurostat in July 2021 reveals. 

This consistent alcoholic intake among Spaniards is far higher than in countries such as Sweden (1.8 percent daily drinkers), Poland (1.6 percent), Norway (1.4 percent), Estonia (1.3 percent) and Latvia (1.2 percent). 

However, the survey that looked at the frequency of alcohol consumption in people aged 15 and over shows that weekly and monthly drinking habits among Spaniards are more in line with European averages. 

A total of 22.9 percent of respondents from Spain said they drunk booze on a weekly basis, 18.3 percent every month, 12.5 percent less than once a month, and 33 percent haven’t had a drink ever or in the last year. 

Furthermore, another part of the study which looked at heavy episodic drinking found that Spaniards are the third least likely to get blind drunk, after Cypriots and Italians.

The Europeans who ingested more than 60 grammes of pure ethanol on a single occasion at least once a month in 2019 were Danes (37.8 percent), Romanians (35 percent), Luxembourgers (34.3 percent) and Germans (30.4 percent). 

The UK did not form part of the study but Ireland is included. 

Overall, Eurostat’s findings reflect how the Spanish habit of enjoying a glass of wine with a meal or a small beer (caña) outdoors with friends continues to be common daily practice, even though 13 percent does not make it prevalent. 

Spaniards’ tendency to drink in moderation also continues to prevail, even though a 2016 study by Danish pharmaceuticals company Lundbeck found that one in six people in the country still drinks too much. 

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