this post was submitted on 26 Aug 2023
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The French government is allocating €200m (£171.6m) to destroy surplus wine and support producers.

It comes amid a cocktail of problems for the industry, including a falling demand for wine as more people drink craft beer.

Overproduction and the cost of living crisis are also hitting the industry.

Most of the €200m will be used to buy excess stock, with the alcohol sold for use in items such as hand sanitiser, cleaning products and perfume.

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[–] [email protected] 55 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Y'know, if you're going to spend the money anyways, just subsidize the sellers for the season and let them cut costs to the point that demand tips up. That way they'll make some money themselves and learn for the next season where the price point is.

All paying to destroy it in order to keep prices up does is... keep it expensive above what the market will bear and cost the taxpayers while making them thirsty and sad

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

I'd love to know how much more demand they could have created by spending that money giving away the wine at a big event where a single sommelier teaches wine appreciation to the masses. Create future customers instead of trying to manipulate markets, I say. Especially when you're selling something addictive.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

cut costs to the point that demand tips up

Price can be a factor in determining what to drink, obviously, but to compare these different products as though they're interchangeable would be a mistake. There's no price point at which a Bordeaux becomes a gose, so you have to account for not just the cost in dollars but the cost inasmuch as the consumer would be subbing something they don't want for something they do. How much cheaper would wine have to be to induce someone who wants a beer to drink it? Personally, if there's only red wine around I'll just go to bed sober at any price.