Due to a decline in youth (15-25-years-old) drinking in most high-income countries over the last 20-years, fewer alcohol control measures seem to be in the cards, according to a new article in the ‘International Journal of Drug Policy’.
Youth drinking has declined across most high-income countries in the last 20 years. Although researchers and commentators have explored the nature and drivers of decline, they have paid less attention to its implications (Holmes et al 2022).
This matters, cites the authors, because of the potential impact on contemporary and future public health, as well as on alcohol policymaking. This new report therefore considers how youth drinking trends may develop in future, what this would mean for public health, and what it might mean for alcohol policy and debate.
The authors argue that the decline in youth drinking is well-established and unlikely to reverse, despite smaller declines and stabilising trends in recent years. Young people also appear to be carrying their lighter drinking into adulthood in at least some countries. This suggests that we should expect large short- and long-term public health benefits. The latter may however be obscured in population-level data by increased harm arising from earlier, heavier drinking generations moving through the highest risk points in the life course.
The likely impact of the decline in youth drinking on public and policy debate is less clear. Holms explores the possibilities using two model scenarios, the reinforcement and withdrawal models. In the reinforcement model, a ‘virtuous’ circle of falling alcohol consumption, increasing public support for alcohol control policies and apparent policy successes facilitates progressive strengthening of policy, akin to that seen in the tobacco experience.
In the withdrawal model, policy-makers turn their attention to other problems, public health advocates struggle to justify proposed interventions and existing policies erode over time as industry actors reassert and strengthen their partnerships with government around alcohol policy. The authors argue that disconnects between the tobacco experience and the reinforcement model make the withdrawal model a more plausible scenario. They conclude by suggesting some tentative ways forward for public health actors worki