Over the last 40 years, IWSR has built up the world’s largest database on the beverage alcohol market. It claims to understand the market, category and brand performances of products in 157 countries across the world using local market input. Occasionally, IWSR releases market reports, and occasionally we run those market reports because we find them interesting and insightful. Here’s one right now!
Last week, we ran a report titled: “U.S. beverage alcohol volumes decline again in 2017, beer category declines substantially.” This week, we tackle global alcohol consumption — and beer is fairing a little better outside the United States (like in Mexico, for instance). Total global alcohol consumption grew slightly in 2017, increasing by 3.5m 9-liter cases versus 2016, according to data released by the IWSR, the world’s leading authority on global beverage alcohol data and analysis.
Though 2017’s growth is very modest at 0.01 percent, it follows a decline of -1.25 percent in 2016, which is a positive turnaround for the industry as a whole. Wine contributed to the largest gain in global volume, followed by cider. Spirits declined marginally due to losses in the CIS. Beer and mixed drinks consumption continued to decline.
After a static year in 2016, still wine staged a comeback in 2017, gaining 12m cases (+0.5 percent). Italy, Russia and the United States were the top growth markets for still wine, while the United Kingdom and France saw the largest declines. These mature wine markets are losing out to generational shifts in drinks choices; cider and sparkling wine growth in the UK counteracted the decline of still wine, and in France beer consumption rose strongly.
The fastest-growing regions for spirits were Asia-Pacific and the Americas. The continued growth of baijiu in China is the main contributor to the Asia-Pacific volumes, but whisky also performed well in the region, adding 2.7M cases between 2016 and 2017 (+1.2 percent). Similarly, whisky grew by 2.7M cases in the Americas (+3.2 percent), and vodka adding 1.7M cases (+1.8 percent). Agave-based spirits were the best-performing category in the region by percentage growth, growing 5.3 percent, adding 1.4M cases. The CIS was the only region to see a decline in spirits consumption, falling -7.6 percent (25.2m cases), due to the decrease of vodka consumption in Russia and Ukraine. Government pressures and generational shifts contribute to these ongoing declines.
In percentage terms, agave-based spirits were the fastest-growing category globally (+5.2 percent), followed by gin and genever (+4.5 percent) and whisky (+2 percent). The United States was the largest-growth market for agave-based spirits and whisky, and the United Kingdom was the largest-growth market for gin.
Beer returned to growth in the Americas, led by Mexico and Argentina, despite continued declines in the United States. Positive results in the Americas along with strong growth in Africa, the Middle East and Europe helped to slow the global decline of beer consumption. Though cider growth in Europe has slowed, momentum in Africa and the Middle East helped spur a 2.5 percent global volume increase. The mixed drinks market declined by -1 percent, led by a slowdown in Asia-Pacific and further category negative trends in the CIS and the Americas.
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