tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post7777138690277611655..comments2024-03-28T17:11:52.333+00:00Comments on The Pub Curmudgeon: Inflating your pintCurmudgeonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02558747878308766840noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-90289809517376548882010-05-02T08:51:50.937+01:002010-05-02T08:51:50.937+01:00I well remember on my first trip to Manchester dur...I well remember on my first trip to Manchester during Euro 96 paying £1 for a great pint of Holts in the Old Monkey. Looks like Holts prices have risen far faster than inflation in the 14 years since. I'm sure I paid about £1.20 in Sinclairs, suggesting Sam Smiths have kept the lid on prices (less repeated refurbishments ?).Martin, Cambridgenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-57928238057135554382010-04-29T16:58:44.374+01:002010-04-29T16:58:44.374+01:00I'm sure 21p bought a pint of Pedigree in earl...I'm sure 21p bought a pint of Pedigree in early 1976 in the Whitworth Hotel, Rusholme. Boddingtons in a scruffy boozer would have been a little less. Back then, off selling was far less sophisticated. Perhaps you should be looking at corner shop prices now? People expect more comfort in pubs. Remember some of the toilets? Also we are now in a vicious upward price spiral. The smoking ban means far fewer serious drinkers, so less revenue and so raised prices to maintain profits etc. The only way out has been to become a familiy friendly seller of meals, which, my accountant sister tells me account for 60% of a typical food pub's profits. If prices were lowered substantially there would need to be a huge increase, maybe a doubling of customers. Do they exist. I smoke, so I wouldn't go in a pub even if the beer were free. These days, most people can afford to to spens a lot on leisure. For whatever reason, they choose not to go in pubs.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-80821433333106155542010-04-28T19:47:34.905+01:002010-04-28T19:47:34.905+01:00Your 13p in 1971 comes to 26p in 1976 in RPI terms...Your 13p in 1971 comes to 26p in 1976 in RPI terms and 29p in terms of average earnings, so in relative terms it's rather more expensive than my 21p pint.<br /><br />But, however you look at it, there's no doubt that beer in the pub is more expensive in terms of the RPI.Curmudgeonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02558747878308766840noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-22643612200879089132010-04-28T18:37:00.280+01:002010-04-28T18:37:00.280+01:00"So, by whatever measure you choose, a pint o...<i>"So, by whatever measure you choose, a pint of beer in the pub is actually considerably dearer than it once was."</i><br /><br />Well, no, that's not true. If you take the base date as 1971, when beer was 13p a pint (and yes, I was drinking legally then, so I win the "old git" stakes) the equivalent 'average earnings' price in 2008 was £2.45: so by this measure a pint of beer in the pub costs exactly the same as it once did.<br /><br />What you HAVE all missed is that these figures do knock on the head the argument often put forward by the neo-prohibitionists that alcohol is now relatively cheaper than it once was. Clearly it isn't, in general.Martyn Cornellhttp://zythophile.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-56490427548976826912010-04-28T16:50:42.790+01:002010-04-28T16:50:42.790+01:00The pub trade in general does seem over the years ...The pub trade in general does seem over the years to have complacently put through slightly-above-inflation price rises without stopping to think what they were doing to their business over the long term. There's no single cause for the decline of pubs, but I'm sure that if bitter was generally £1.50 a pint (as it still is in Sam Smith's pubs) they would have more customers.<br /><br />Wetherspoon's are the only pub operator who really seem to understand how to use pricing to drive custom. The degree to which pub customers are price-conscious is often underestimated. It may not drive people away in the short term, but a perception that a pub is expensive may harm repeat business.<br /><br />Pubs could take a leaf out of the supermarkets' book and give the impression of offering lower prices without actually losing much revenue (for example by having a discounted Beer of the Week).<br /><br />Petrol stations are not a fair comparison, though, as in a petrol station there is no service element and customers are not in effect renting space.Curmudgeonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02558747878308766840noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-75524343252010221782010-04-28T10:47:18.199+01:002010-04-28T10:47:18.199+01:00Yes, it's a fair point that booze is not under...Yes, it's a fair point that booze is not underpriced in the off-trade, but over priced in the on-trade. It's no secret that pub prices have spiralled up out of all context. Problem is I can't see them coming down to off-trade levels anytime soon. <br /><br />With £1.79 being the average Spoons price, does that mean that they are the only ones selling beer at today's real price?<br /><br />As for Tandles, he was an uncivil servant-they don't work till they drop. In fact, he was still in short trousers when he retired.Sat In A Pubhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08123038980796000837noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-10986153221795638262010-04-27T23:46:38.125+01:002010-04-27T23:46:38.125+01:00Lets get down to the nitty gritty.
Draught beer in...Lets get down to the nitty gritty.<br />Draught beer in a pub is one allmighty rip off. Full stop.<br />You dont need a calculator.<br />Pub, John Smiths £18.40 a gallon<br />Garage nearby Petrol £5.48 a gallon<br />The tax differentials are cancelled out by the production costs.<br />For the simple minded or state school educated , theres something<br />very seriously out of plonk.<br />Who do we blame,Labour,the breweries,the pubcos,the supermarkets,the landlords maybe the EU. No NO No,, the brain dead<br />numpties who carry on paying the<br />rip off prices. If the fresh air ale fans joined the smokers and shunned the pubs,just watch the prices tumble.<br /><br /><br />Ex 7x5 pints a week<br /><br />CheersAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-6324761294243773712010-04-27T19:15:01.022+01:002010-04-27T19:15:01.022+01:00Apologies, Tandy, as you had mentioned you were re...Apologies, Tandy, as you had mentioned you were retired I had got the impression you were perhaps a little older.Curmudgeonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02558747878308766840noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-66419907879376120552010-04-27T15:27:40.622+01:002010-04-27T15:27:40.622+01:00OMG, I'm older than the Curmudgeon. 11p in 197...OMG, I'm older than the Curmudgeon. 11p in 1972, I think.<br /><br />It might be more instructive to measure the price of a pint against property prices as pub takings appear to go to meet repayments for pubs bought in droves by pubcos at the top of the market.NAMhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13247378318975737305noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-66627163110186691222010-04-27T15:17:15.962+01:002010-04-27T15:17:15.962+01:00Not quite Mudgie. I was still at school.Not quite Mudgie. I was still at school.Tandlemanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06804499573827044693noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-60148628076548967142010-04-27T14:29:26.681+01:002010-04-27T14:29:26.681+01:00Decimalisation was in 1971 - even I couldn't l...Decimalisation was in 1971 - even I couldn't legally drink then! Tandleman, on the other hand...Curmudgeonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02558747878308766840noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5623537812609722663.post-39759307474056515622010-04-27T14:21:06.699+01:002010-04-27T14:21:06.699+01:0021p? Sure it wasn't 21d, harpenny and thrippen...21p? Sure it wasn't 21d, harpenny and thrippence tuppany bob? Oldtimer.<br /><br />You're not wrong though. The price of a pint has doubled since I started boozing, most other things haven't. Burger, chips & a coke from the clown is 50p more.<br /><br />Pubs represent pretty poor value.Cooking Lagerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02830924433230427226noreply@blogger.com