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30-11-2017, 07:29
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https://i0.wp.com/boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/pound_pint.jpg?resize=650%2C413&ssl=1Cask ale is both too cheap and too expensive. Or, rather,*both of the following statements are true:

It is a problem for brewers that cask beer – culturally important and relatively more difficult to brew, distribute and serve at its best – is expected to be cheaper than other forms of beer on sale in the UK.
Consumers cannot be expected to pay more for cask beer.

Let’s look at item No. 1 first.
We have testimony from multiple brewers that cask ale not only offers only slim profit margins but also comes with additional challenges not found with keg or small-pack products. Take this from Northern Monk, for example (https://www.northernmonkbrewco.com/blog/2017/11/cask-beer-our-approach):

[Logistically cask is] a massive headache for us… It makes no sense for us to package in a format that we’re not really set up for, has a lower market value than other packaged formats and our beer isn’t particularly suited to.
Or, if you don’t much value the views of ‘upstarts’, here’s Roger Ryman of St Austell (https://www.morningadvertiser.co.uk/Article/2017/09/20/Cask-beer-What-price-is-right): “Overall profit on cask beer is wafer thin in free trade and national distribution where we compete against the many hundreds of breweries that operate in this market”.
So, competition is an issue but we also find ourselves suspecting that if it weren’t for certain oddities in the market – the gravitational pull of the Campaign for Real Ale, a historical expectation that cask will be cheaper than keg – cask would be a premium product costing more than most keg beers. That is sometimes expressed, for the sake of brevity, especially on Twitter, as “Cask is too cheap”, or “Cask ought to be more expensive”, or “I’d be willing to pay more”.
There’s a cheap rhetorical trick that often gets played at this point: “Oh, so you think £3 a pint is too cheap? Alright for you, moneybags.”; “So what you’re saying is that want to exclude poor people from cask altogether then? You elitist bastard.”; “You want to pay more? Are you quite mad?”
(Also a cheap trick: paraphrasing those rather than quoting specific examples, but we don’t want to get into beef with anyone in particular.)
The problem is, those latter voices also have a point, which brings us to item 2.
Nobody Has Any MoneyJournalist Will Hawkes put this well on Twitter last week (https://twitter.com/Will_Hawkes/status/934095502429351936) (and, indeed, prompted this entire post):
https://i2.wp.com/boakandbailey.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/hawkes_tweet.png?resize=550%2C207&ssl=1
As a consumer it can get pretty exhausting: support pubs, support small breweries, boycott supermarkets, support record shops, support bookshops, support struggling restaurants, support your local butcher, baker, artisanal candlemaker. Buy local, buy Fair Trade, buy British. Oh, and pay into a pension, and save for a rainy day, and put a roof over your head in a property market gone insane, and also we’d like you to go onto a contract which means we can’t guarantee your income from one month to the next. Oh, and it’s 30p to use the toilet now, by the way, because there’s no magic money tree and so on and so forth.
If somehow the price of cask ale rose by, say, 20p a pint across the board, it wouldn’t unlock some secret pot of money that consumers are sitting on. Indeed, it would probably push a significant number over the edge, reducing the number of trips they make to the pub.
“Well, drink less but better,” people sometimes say, but, honestly, if we drank much less we might as well give up and join the Band of Hope, even though going to the pub is our biggest leisure expenditure each month. (If you haven’t already done so try totting up how much you spend in the pub each month – the numbers are a bit scary.)
To us, and others like us, and especially those worse off than us, it doesn’t feel as if cask ale is cheap. The fact that some really cheap beer is available, at Wetherspoon or Sam Smith pubs, doesn’t ‘devalue cask’ – it’s a lifeline, part of the balancing act (https://boakandbailey.com/2016/08/all-things-in-balance/) that means we can occasionally afford to splash on something special at £5 a pint.
So Mr Hawkes is right: brewers and their boosters need to find better ways to tackle this issue than berating or guilt-tripping. Equally, when a brewery makes a commercial decision to pull out of cask, or refuses to budge on price (https://www.morningadvertiser.co.uk/Article/2017/11/28/Tiny-Rebel-Brewing-Co-If-you-want-our-cask-beer-you-will-pay-what-we-charge), consumers (and especially real ale campaigners) shouldn’t be turning the guilt-gun back on them: they’re doing what they feel needs to be done to survive in an ever-more competitive market.
Cask Ale is Too Cheap/Expensive (https://boakandbailey.com/2017/11/cask-ale-is-too-cheap-expensive/) originally posted at Boak & Bailey's Beer Blog (https://boakandbailey.com)


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