Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 21 – As vodka prices
rise in Russia as a result of various state policies, some Russians are turning
as they traditionally have done to potentially dangerous surrogates, but ever
more are taking advantage of their right to produce spirits on their own, to
judge from surging demand at online equipment stores.
According to “Rossiyskaya gazeta,”
most Russians are doing so because of rising prices for commercially produced
liquors, but some are doing so for “romantic” notion” and out of a sense of
“family pride.” And it suggests that these home producers are illegally selling
about 20 percent of their production (rg.ru/2013/07/19/samogon.html).
The Moscow Center for the Study of
Federal and Regional Alcohol Markets now estimates that Russians are producing
“not less than 250 million liters” of home brew or “samogon” each year at a
cost of less than 40 rubles (1.3 US dollars) each. That is far less than the
170 rubles (4.2 US dollars) vodka costs in the stores.
“Rossiyskaya gazeta” queried owners
and employees at “more than ten major producers and sellers of samogon
equipment” to get some idea about the growth in this sector of the Russian
economy. All of those with whom the paper spoke said there had been significant
increases in consumer interest and demand.
Yevgeny Demidov, a representative of
one of the largest Internet-based suppliers of such equipment, said that his
sales had increased by 500 percent over the last year, largely because of
rising vodka prices in the stores. He
said that the average samogon equipment package costs 15,000 rubles (480 US
dollars).
Aleksey Kozhekin, the head of the
liquor department of another Moscow store, also reported increases in
sales. He said his company is selling
about 25 samogon kits a day, mostly to people in the regions and even to small
towns “where the post doesn’t go.” He said
that the average cost of such kits “does not exceed 10,000 rubles” (330 US
dollars).
People in rural
areas report “a curious tendency,” he added.
If one resident purchases a samogon kit, soon another does as well.
Moreover, he suggested, in many cases, price had less to do with this trend
than a desire of many more well-off Russians to consume “higher quality
alcohol” and their delight in producing it themselves.
But Vadim Drobiz, the head of the
Moscow Center for the Study of Federal and Regional Alcohol Markets, said that
price is the main driver. He said that some of this new product may be as
dangerous to public health as the surrogates such as perfume and cleaning
fluids that poorer Russians have often turned to when vodka prices have gone up.
Nonetheless, the expert suggested,
samogon production is likely to increase and Russian “samogon will be just as
well-known as French cognac or Scottish whiskey.” Indeed, he concluded, “it is possible that a
special word will appear to designate Russian samogon, [possibly] one like the
American ‘moonshine.’”
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