(no title)
murrayhenson | 4 years ago
When I read this my first thought was something like, "I bet that those who don't drink are making a bit of profit on the side by selling their allowances." However, I'm guessing that for Svalbard's dedicated drinkers ...they're finding a way around the import restrictions.
It would be interesting to hear how folks deal with the restrictions by someone that lives on Svalbard or has spent significant time there.
jhugo|4 years ago
If you don't mind the higher price I'm sure you can still import it as long as you pay the duty. (The linked page merely says that you cannot import tax-free.) So ultimately it's the same situation as in (the rest of) Norway, but with some small allowance of cheaper tax-free alcohol. If they didn't have the quotas, people would arbitrage it.
giantg2|4 years ago
ilaksh|4 years ago
So a bottle of wine, a six pack, five shots, every week.
Gives me a headache just thinking about it.
I believe that there are studies that show that amount of alcohol significantly reduces life expectancy.
alistairSH|4 years ago
24 bottles of liquor, 6 bottles of fortified wines, nearly 300 cans of beer, and unlimited wine annually is low? I'd hate to be the liver of anybody drinking that much.
gregkerzhner|4 years ago
Looking at the numbers on a smaller scale, if you don't count the unlimited wine, the monthly quota works out to be about 2.2 drinks / night - about 1.5 shouts of liquor and less than 1 light beer a night.
Thats a pretty resonable amount of alcohol to consume - just slightly higher than the 14 drinks / week maximum that many health authorities recommend.
How would you feel if the government regulated how much sugar or salt you can eat, how many hours of video games you can play, or maybe even forced you to exercise 400 hours (per year)?
jlawer|4 years ago