Before him he carries noise,
and behind him he leaves
tears…
Coriolanus Act 2, scene 1
Late last week the media reported the release of NT Police
crime statistics which indicate a significant drop in alcohol related crime.
According the Guardian (‘Incredibly noticeable’: alcohol bans have cut family
violence and crime in Alice Springs, advocates say):
NT police statistics collated
by the Central Australian Aboriginal Congress revealed a 37% decrease in
domestic violence assaults from January to April. All other assaults dropped
35% while property offences were down 25% over the same time period.
It is clear that the reinstatement of the alcohol bans on
town camps in Alice Springs and surrounding communities (subject to the
potential for Alcohol Management Plans to be negotiated and approved by the NT
Government) has had a significant and positive impact on crime in Alice Springs
and surrounds.
According to a 23 June 2023 front page story in The
Australian (Grog bans put brake on Alice Springs violence, (link
here
$): “…total recorded assaults dived from more than 260 in January to 170 in
April…”. The Australian also published an editorial on the issue (A sober
Alice Springs starts to get its life back on track’) (link
here)
which is worth reading both for what it gets right and for what it gets wrong
or omits.
The editorial’s headline is clearly misleading: Alice
Springs is not yet sober and alcohol abuse remains a significant and deadly
problem. The Australian’s own article notes that police continue to be
concerned about illegal sales of alcohol, and quotes the Police Association
President as saying that police on the ground ‘have definitely seen an increase
in secondary supply…’. The article goes on to quote NT Police Acting Deputy
Commissioner as stating that ‘volumetric restrictions’ on how much
alcohol individuals could buy would ‘go further in helping to reduce the
alcohol-related harm across the community’.
It is not clear what the Deputy Commissioner of Police had
in mind when he referred to volumetric restrictions, but it has long been
recognised by social scientists that volumetric taxation of alcohol is both
more efficient and has considerable health benefits (link
here).
It is also widely recognised by health professionals that the harms due to
alcohol consumption (and particularly over-consumption) are extremely serious.
See the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare web report on Alcohol,
tobacco & other drugs in Australia (link
here)
for a discussion of alcohol related harm. To take just two mainstream data
points from that report:
(i)
AIHW analysis of the National Hospital
Morbidity Database showed that alcohol accounted for nearly 3 in 5 drug-related
hospitalisations in 2020–21 (57% or 86,400 hospitalisations); and
(ii)
In 2019–20 alcohol-related injuries
resulted in 30,000 hospitalisations (118 per 100,000 population). The most
common causes of alcohol-related injury hospitalisations were falls (39%),
intentional self-harm (24%), assault (15%) and transport (7.2%)
The editorial goes on to allocate blame to the NT and
federal governments, as well as to the NIAA and other paid advisers (it names
KPMG) for being ‘too distant from the realities of life in the areas they
claim to represent’. While the editorial doesn’t name former Minister for
Indigenous Australians Ken Wyatt, it does correctly acknowledge that the
decision to allow the Stronger Futures alcohol controls to lapse was made under
his watch. The editorial correctly notes that Senator Jacinta Price predicted
that the removal of the alcohol bans in the NT would result in an upsurge of
violence against women and children. Offsetting that, it might be observed that
she was not prescient enough while the preselected candidate for the NT Senate
seat to persuade Minister Wyatt to maintain the Commonwealth controls across
her electorate.
The most egregious omission from this Editorial, and indeed
from the whole political narrative related to alcohol consumption and harm
(both to individual and to their families including children) is the effective
capture of governments of all political persuasions in both Canberra and the NT
by the alcohol production and retail industry, and those involved in the associated
supply chains. There is a deep-seated and widespread pro-drinking culture
across the whole NT population, and governments are terrified of antagonising
industry interests because of the nascent potential for those interests to heighten
and leverage political opposition in the electorate. Political donations also
play a part in both Canberra and Darwin.
Meanwhile taxpayers nationally and in the NT are meeting
the costs of the health services, the policing, the incarcerations, and the infrastructure
damage associated with alcohol induced dysfunction. Aboriginal people and
communities bear the direct social and psychological costs of endemic domestic
and lateral violence which are exacerbated and in large measure caused by the
easy availability of alcohol.
Australia provides almost $3bn per annum to businesses to incentivise
Research and Development that would otherwise not occur because R&D is a positive
externality (link
here).
The explicit rationale for R& D subsidies to business arhe the existence of
positive externalities. That is, businesses do not accrue all the benefits of
their R&D and are thus not adequately encouraged to invest in it. There is
a public interest in maximising R & D. Yet alcohol harm has extensive
negative externalities without government taxation linked to the harm to
society generally. That is, the alcohol producers do not bear all the costs
arising from the sale of their product, and are thus incentivised to over
invest in producing it (and to also lobby against any regulation in the public interest).
While governments do tax alcohol, the taxation of alcohol
is not driven by the need to internalise the costs, but rather by governments’
revenue raising strategies mediated by the counter-lobbying of particular
segments of the alcohol industry. Higher rates of tax on alcohol — ideally
related both to the volume of alcohol involved and the the levels of harm
arising (link
here) — would both reduce the demand and thus the levels of societal harm
caused by alcohol consumption, and coincidentally strengthen the abilities of
governments to invest in harm minimisation. The AIHW web report cited above notes
that the levels of alcohol related harm are higher in remote regions than
elsewhere.
The ABC too has a report on the new statistics (link
here),
based on evidence given to an ongoing coronial inquiry into the deaths of four
women in NT communities arising from domestic violence by their intimate
partners (link
here).
Two of the cases occurred in Central Australia. The Coroner will undoubtedly make
finding in relation to the role, if any, alcohol abuse played in the extended
cycles of domestic violence these women suffered, and which ultimately ended
with their violent deaths.
One problem with the media coverage of many of the
challenges facing remote communities is that the coverage inevitably focusses
on events and not on underlying processes or causes. However, they also often
go further, and actively frame the issues in ways which have the effect, or are
designed, to avoid and mislead the consumers of media by focussing on trite but
plausible narratives rather than acknowledging the existence of systemic and
institutional forces that hold sway over virtually the entire span of public
policy in Australia. Yet the government decisions in both Canberra and Darwin can
be framed in different ways.
The decisions to allow the lapse of alcohol controls, to then
resist reinstating those controls, and ultimately — in the face of irresistible
political pressure from mainstream interests arising from social chaos
engendered by the uncontrolled flood of alcohol into town camps and communities
— to lead the Commonwealth Government to intervene and effectively coerce the
NT Government to reinstate controls were both geographically and temporally
complex. The Australian editorial frames
these decisions as the result of governments not listening to local
(Aboriginal) voices.
In doing so, The Australian editorial effectively ignores
an alternative framing, namely that governments do not listen to Aboriginal
voices because they are beholden to the alcohol industry. The sorry history of
the NT Labor Government’s approach to the proposal for a Dan Murphy superstore
near Darwin airport is redolent with obsequious pandering to alcohol interests
(link
here).
Both the NT and the Commonwealth Parliaments have strong Indigenous
representation, including amongst the Ministers who were ostensibly responsible
for taking these decisions. It strains credulity to conceive that these
decisionmakers were somehow ‘removed from those whose interests they were
supposed to protect’, or were not prepared to listen to local voices. These
decisionmakers do not spend their entire lives in Canberra nor in Darwin. At
their core, these decisions were political decisions, not policy decisions, and
were taken because of the systemic power of the alcohol industry.
Subsidiary framings (also not explored by the recent media
reports) include the possibility that the NT Government was committed to
abolishing alcohol controls in order to reduce the flow of itinerants into
Darwin and other major centres, and the federal Labor Government was unwilling
to itself re-legislate in order to minimise friction with the NT Labor
Government, and the concomitant perception of incompetence were it to do so
directly. Hence the elaborate charade of a joint media conference to announce
Commonwealth funding and the NT Government backflip (link
here).
I do not absolve the decisionmakers in Canberra and Darwin,
on both sides of politics, for their poor and socially destructive decision-making
both on this issue and in relation to other shortcomings across the Indigenous
policy domain. Decisions that have led to the continuation of extraordinary
levels of social harm both for drinkers, but more importantly for their
partners and children and local communities. But nor should media outlets be absolved when
they effectively run interference for commercial interests that are the direct cause
of so much societal harm.
Alcohol abuse is clearly an important contributor to the
challenges facing remote Indigenous communities across at least four
jurisdictions. It does not however represent the totality of the challenge, and
there are no panaceas. A first step however is to understand that the
promulgation of misleading or tendentious policy narratives and framings will
not lead to effective policy reform. A second step would be to actively
consider policy options designed to limit the unrestricted supply of full strength
alcoholic beverages across the whole community.
Addendum
For those interested, a selection of some previous posts
related to alcohol issues in remote Australia are set out below:
Alice Springs crisis: observations on remote policy (link
here)
Alcohol policy reform in remote Australia: a potential
roadmap (link
here)
Neil Westbury article on regressive changes to remote
alcohol laws in the NT (link
here)
Regulating Alcohol in the Northern Territory: in whose
interest? (link
here)
Alcohol policy reform: addressing the underlying economic
incentives (link
here)
Alcohol Regulation in Remote NT Communities (link
here)
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