Raise drinking age to 21, says think tank
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Young people should be banned from drinking until they reach 21 or be forced to carry a card that records their alcohol intake, a think tank columnist claims yesterday.
Binge drinking has become such an “overwhelming” problem, argues journal of the left-leaning Institute for Public Policy Research, that policy makers need to practice “tough love” and put drink out of the reach of youngsters.
In an article to be published this week columnist Jasper Gerard will say that the UK has “lost the plot” over drinking laws.
He proposes raising the drinking age to 21 or requiring 18-year-olds to carry smart cards which record how much they have drunk each night and restricting them to three units of alcohol.
Gerrard will also propose increasing the number of prosecutions and the level of fines on retailers selling alcohol to under-age drinkers and upping taxes on alcopops
He said: “The adverse social effects of binge drinking are now so overwhelming that we need to practise tough love.
“By raising the age threshold it is at least possible that those in their early and mid teens will not see drink as something they will soon be allowed to do so therefore they might as well start doing it surreptitiously now. Instead they might come to see it as it should be: forbidden.”
“Society is increasingly reluctant to tolerate passive smoking, so why passive boozing - which is what innocent people experience when a drunken, clunking fist attacks them on a Saturday night?”
The number of under-18s taken to hospital with alcohol related diseases and injuries rose in 2005-2006 to 8,299, a jump of 40% on figures three years ago.
A survey by charity, Alcohol Concern, found in 2005 that more than one in five 11-year-olds admitted to drinking. By the age of 12, drinkers start to outnumber non-drinkers.
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