Canada extends 2% cap on alcohol excise duty inflation adjustment

Published 2024년 3월 12일

Tridge summary

The Canadian government has extended a temporary 2% cap on excise duties on alcohol for another two years, acknowledging the significant economic contribution of the country's alcohol industry. The cap, initially set to end in April, has been praised by Spirits Canada, a national trade association for distilled spirits. Additionally, the government will halve the excise duty rate on the first 15,000 hectoliters of beer brewed by a Canadian brewery, providing further tax relief for small craft brewers.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Last April, the government introduced the temporary one-year cap of 2% on increases to excise duties on beer, spirits and wine. But that had been due to end in April, leading to a 4.7% rise in alcohol excise. However, the two-year extension of the 2% cap - announced on Saturday (March 9) - has been announced to ‘recognize the significant contribution that Canadian wineries, breweries, cideries and distilleries make to the national economy by creating good jobs and high-quality products'. Spirits Canada, the national trade association representing distilled spirits, has welcomed the 2% cap. “The choice to cap the excise tax increase at 2% represents alignment on the recommendations that the combined voices of the beer, wine, spirits, restaurant, and hospitality sectors made,” said Cal Bricker, President & CEO of Spirits Canada. “Since its introduction in 2017, the escalator tax, has subjected alcohol to automatic annual hikes based on changes in the Consumer Price Index (CPI). ...

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