随着全球金融危机的蔓延,俄罗斯百姓"勒紧裤腰带过日子"的意识正进一步增强。"国酒"伏特加本月的存货量比去年同期高出六倍,越来越多的人们为了省钱而选择廉价的伏特加替代饮品,从而导致今年九月以来俄罗斯的酒精中毒致死事件频发。
The global financial
crisis has grown so bad that Russians are cutting back on vodka
The global financial
crisis has grown so bad that Russians are cutting back on vodka.
Stockpiles of Russia's national drink were six times higher at the start of the month than the same time a year ago because factories are producing vodka faster than they can sell it, an alcohol industry lobby and research group said on Monday.
"People are having to save money, including on drinks, and this is connected to the
impact of the financial
crisis on people's disposable incomes," Pavel Shapkin, president of the National Alcohol Association (NAA), told Reuters.
Research by his organisation showed deaths from alcohol poisonings in September increased to 1,458 -- the result, it said, of some Russians turning to dangerous vodka substitutes as they try to find a cheaper way of becoming intoxicated.
Russia's economy has been among the biggest losers from the global financial
crisis. Its stock markets have lost about 70 percent of their value since peaks in May, and workers have been hit by lay-offs and wage arrears.
Russians consume the
equivalent of 15 litres of pure alcohol per head each year, chief public health official Gennady Onishchenko said in a newspaper interview last year.
The alcohol industry body said 8.2 million decalitres of vodka -- or more than half a litre for every one of Russia's 141 million population -- was stockpiled in shops and warehouses on November 1, a volume
unprecedented in modern Russia.
In further evidence of the
impact of the
crisis, separate research by TsIFFRA, an industry analytics firm, showed alcohol production dropped 15 percent in October due to poor demand.
Fatalities
related to alcohol poisoning had been in steady decline since 2006, when there was an
outbreak of deaths from bootleg vodka. But in September they rose again for the first time, going up by 6 percent on the same period last year, according to the NAA's research.
"The government has to do something for these people
trying to afford the most basic essentials in life," Shapkin said.
"At times like this, any grandmother can collect some old bottles, fill them with whatever she wants, and sell them to the
alcoholics that are
trying to save some money."
The previous
outbreak of fatal alcohol poisonings was caused by a crackdown on
counterfeit liquor being sold in stores in the city of Pskov in north-west Russia.
Bootleggers quickly filled the
vacuum with a low-grade black market brew, which was blamed for
widespread liver failure, jaundice and toxic hepatitis that swamped the city's hospitals and its morgues.
Other drinkers went for anything with alcohol content, including cosmetics, perfumes and cleaning agents to bring about the same effects as vodka, whose name in Russian is the
diminutive of the word for water.
Vodka gained
widespreadpopularity in the 1860s after the Tsarist government lifted its
monopoly on vodka production. This caused prices to plummet and made vodka available to even the poorest Russians.
Today it accounts for
roughly 70 percent of all the
alcoholic beverages consumed in Russia, and a plastic half-litre bottle can be purchased for as little as 50 roubles (1.20 pounds).
But more affluent Russians, who have
increasinglyfavoured whisky in recent years, can pay thousands of dollars for a single bottle of top-quality vodka.
Vocabulary:
alcohol poisonings: 酒精中毒
bootlegger: someone who makes or sells
illegal liquor, 造私酒者
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