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Why are the French drinking less wine?

By Hugh Schofield BBC News, Paris

Does the seemingly perpetual decline in consumption of France's national drink

symbolise a corresponding decline in French civilisation?

The question worries a lot of people - oenophiles, cultural commentators,

flag-wavers for French exceptionalism - all of whom have watched with

consternation the gradual disappearance of wine from the national dinner table.

Recent figures merely confirm what has been observed for years, that the number

of regular drinkers of wine in France is in freefall.

In 1980 more than half of adults were consuming wine on a near-daily basis.

Today that figure has fallen to 17%.

Meanwhile, the proportion of French people who never drink wine at all has

doubled to 38%.

In 1965, the amount of wine consumed per head of population was 160 litres a

year. In 2010 that had fallen to 57 litres, and will most likely dip to no more

than 30 litres in the years ahead.

At dinner, wine is the third most popular drink after tap and bottled water.

Sodas and fruit juices are catching up fast and are now just a short way

behind.

According to a recent study in the International Journal of Entrepreneurship,

changes in French drinking habits are clearly visible through the attitudes of

successive generations.

People in their 60s and 70s grew up with wine on the table at every meal. For

them, wine remains an essential part of their patrimoine, or cultural heritage.

The middle generation - now in their 40s and 50s - sees wine as a more

occasional indulgence. They compensate for declining consumption by spending

more money. They like to think they drink less but better.

Members of the third generation - the internet generation - do not even start

taking an interest in wine until their mid-to-late 20s. For them, wine is a

product like any other, and they need persuading that it is worth their money.

Consumption of wine in France, 1980 to 2010

"What has happened is a progressive erosion of wine's identity, and of its

sacred and imaginary representations," say the report's authors, Thierry Lorey

and Pascal Poutet.

"Over three generations, this has led to the changes in France's habits of

consumption and the steep declines in the volume of wine that is drunk."

The fall in consumption is mirrored in other countries - such as Italy and

Spain - which are also historic producers of wine. And it has not dented the

prospects for exports of French wine, which continues to hold its own abroad.

But what worries people are the effects of the change on life inside France, on

French civilisation.

They fear that time-honoured French values - conviviality, tradition and

appreciation of the good things in life - are on the way out. Taking their

place is a utilitarian, "hygieno-moralistic" new order, cynically purveyed by

an alliance of politics, media and global business.

"Wine is not some trophy product that we roll out to celebrate the grand

occasions or to show off our social status. It is a table drink intended to

accompany the meal and provide a complement to whatever is on our plate," says

food writer Perico Legasse.

"Wine is an element in the meal. But what has happened is that it's gone from

being popular to elitist. It is totally ridiculous. It should be perfectly

possible to drink moderately of good quality wine on a daily basis."

For Legasse, part of the fault is a changing national approach to food and

gastronomy as a whole.

What the French drink with meals

Drink 1980 2010

Source : FranceAgriMer

Wine

50%

24%

Tap water

47%

44%

Mineral water

24%

43%

Soft drinks or juice

5%

15%

"For many years people have been steadily abandoning what in our French

sociology we referred to as the repas, or meal, by which I mean a convivial

gathering around a table, and not the individualised, accelerated version we

see today.

"The traditional family meal is withering away. Instead we have a purely

technical form of nourishment, whose aim is to make sure we fuel up as

effectively and as quickly as possible."

Wine drinking in France is certainly part of a long-standing way of life, but

it would be wrong to suppose that the French have always drunk as much as they

did, say, 50 years ago.

In the Middle Ages, wine was commonly drunk (at least in wine-growing areas),

but it was a weak concoction and popular mainly because - unlike water - it was

safe.

The Revolution of 1789 dispelled the aristocratic image that wine had, by then,

acquired, and the economic changes of 19th Century helped it permeate society.

French soldiers in the snow French soldiers in WWI drank wine for its

fortifying qualities

Denis Saverot, editor of La Revue des Vins de France magazine, says the rise of

wine mirrored the rise of the working class. But it was the war of 1914-18 that

really secured its position in the hearts of the French.

A sedative hypnotic drug...

The cumulative effects of excessive alcohol consumption, especially when

associated with a poor diet, affect every part of the body

The two main sites of damage are the liver and the nervous system

Alcoholism is also implicated in diabetes, inflammation of the pancreas,

internal bleeding, weakening of the heart, high blood pressure and stroke

BBC Health: Alcohol addiction

"Basically the soldiers went over the top pickled on pinard, the strong,

low-quality wine which was supplied in bulk. Up until then the Normans, the

Bretons, the people of Picardy and the north, they had never touched wine. But

they learned in the trenches.

"After that in France we generalised the consumption of cheap wine so that by

the 1950s there were drinking outlets, cafes and bars, everywhere. Tiny

villages would have five or six. But that was the high point. The decline in

consumption goes back to the 1960s."

Everyone agrees on the main factors. Fewer people work outdoors, so the

fortifying qualities of wine are less in demand. Offices require people to stay

awake, so lunchtimes are, by and large, dry.

Then there is the rise of the car ("wine's worst enemy" for Saverot), changing

demographics, with France's large Muslim minority, and the growing popularity

of beers and mixers.

Start Quote

The village bar has gone, replaced by a pharmacy

Denis Saverot

But Saverot has another target in his sights.

"It is our bourgeois, technocratic elite with their campaigns against

drink-driving and alcoholism, lumping wine in with every other type of alcohol,

even though it should be regarded as totally different," he says.

"Recently I heard one senior health official saying that wine causes cancer

'from the very first glass'. That coming from a Frenchman. I was flabbergasted.

In hock with the health lobby and the politically correct, our elites prefer to

keep the country on chemical anti-depressants and wean us off wine.

"Just look at the figures. In the 1960s, we were drinking 160 litres each a

year and weren't taking any pills. Today we consume 80 million packets of

anti-depressants, and wine sales are collapsing. Wine is the subtlest, most

civilised, most noble of anti-depressants. But look at our villages. The

village bar has gone, replaced by a pharmacy."

Veteran observer of his nation's way of life, Oxford-based French writer

Theodore Zeldin agrees that a business-style culture has made huge inroads into

France - the bane of all those who prefer to take the time to savour things.

"Companionship has been replaced by networking. Business means busy-ness, and

in that way we are becoming like everywhere else," he says.

French politicians US politicians choose diners for photo opportunities, the

French go for wine

But Zeldin refuses to abandon hope.

"The old French art de vivre is still there. It's an ideal. It's a bit like the

ideal of an English gentleman. You don't often find an English gentleman, but

the ideal is there and it informs society as a whole," he says.

"It is the same with our art de vivre. Of course times have changed, but it

still survives. It is that feeling you get in France that in human relations we

need to do more than just conduct business. We have a duty to entertain, to

converse. And in France - thanks to our education system - we still have that

ability to converse in a general, universalist way that has been lost

elsewhere.

"That is the art de vivre. It is about taking your time. And wine is part of

it, because with wine you have to take your time.

"After all, that is one of the great things about wine. You can't swig it."