One of the most common of the many Irish
laments of the last few years has been the steady decline of the pub.
From
being at the very heart of the social fabric in its heyday, many of the once
vibrant tithe tábhairne now resemble funeral parlours before the evening rush
– and that’s on a supposedly busy Saturday night.
So how did it come to this? Well, the worst recession the country has ever experienced has certainly played its part.
As a BBC Radio 4 reporter smugly put it – as only the British can –
when the true extent of independent Ireland’s financial woes were coming to
light, “even the pubs in city centre Dublin are suffering. Now for the Irish
that’s really saying something.” Indeed.
Some people say the seeds of the
public-house recession were sown well before the economic downturn – they point
to the arrival of the smoking ban as the beginning of the end. It’s an easy
scapegoat but similar restrictions in other countries have not led to a
massive slump in the number of people heading out socialising.
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Bringing the pub home. |
Of course, the fact that the most ‘hedonistic’
age group – those in their late teens and 20s – are departing the forlorn
state in search of much greener pastures is also a big contributing factor to
the Irish pub’s sad and painful death.
But what of those who remain, are they
drinking less? The short answer is no. Most studies into alcohol
consumption in the Ireland find that we’re drinking as much as ever. The
crucial difference is that the venue has changed.
The reclining sofa in front
of the flat screen TV has replaced the high stool at the bar. For a nation
renowned for its affability, that’s quite a sad turn of events.
Instead of
hitting for the ‘local’, having a few drinks and a chat in the company of
others, many Irish are deciding to stay in and crack open a few
cans in front of a rectangular box in their living room – where there is
absolutely no monitoring of alcohol intake.
So, it appears, the main reason why the
humble Irish pub has witnessed a mass exodus in recent years is a matter of cost,
pure and simple.
At the very least, the price of a regular pint at a bar is
three-times more expensive compared to what you will pay at a supermarket or
off-licence. In such straitened financial times, people feel that there is no
longer value in going to a pub, whatever the negative social
consequences.
In fairness, you can’t really blame them. Why there is such a
mark-up between what you pay in a shop and the price for the same product –
more or less – at your local hostelry is a mystery, especially when you see how
things are done in other countries.
Take Colombia, for example. It’s possible to
head out to a little bar here – or tienda, as the locals call them – and pay
less (and that price is very small too) to consume a beer on the premises than
you would if you wanted to bring it home.
So, unsurprisingly, these places get
hefty crowds daily – a sociable environment where you are drinking and chatting
with others, with at least a modicum of supervision to boot.
This is much
better than drinking at home in front of the kids, right? Irish law-makers,
backed up by the anti-drink, anti-pub campaigners think not, it seems. ‘Let’s
make socialising in a pub so expensive that nobody can afford to go anymore’ is
their mantra. The suck-the-life-out-of-the country policy has fully taken
root.
Thumbs up to cheap beer in a sociable environment. |
Now, from a rural Ireland
point of view we can’t write about the decline of the pub without referring to
the far stricter drink-driving laws that have been introduced in recent years.
It’s a difficult, emotive subject that will rumble on.
There is still an out-of-sight-out-of-mind approach taken by some country Gardaí to breaches of the
law, especially towards older citizens. It might not be right, but it works
most of the time.
One thing, though, our Government could do, if it truly cared about rural Ireland, is to put some decent thought into providing proper public
transport outside of the bigger urban areas.
However, the chances of that
happening are about as high as Brian Cowen becoming the next president or a
Colombian sticking to his word.
So, is the Irish pub as we once knew it,
particularly the rural one, now just a blurry distant memory, never to be
revived?
Well, if the powers that be continue to pursue their current line of attack,
then the answer is yes. Plus, with very few people left to stand up for life in
the Irish countryside, who’s going to stop the rout?
The sad thing right now is that it’s all happening under the watchful but seemingly indifferent eye of a west of Ireland prime minister. The west – along with other rural parts of the country – is falling asleep once more.
This time, though, it might not wake up again.
The sad thing right now is that it’s all happening under the watchful but seemingly indifferent eye of a west of Ireland prime minister. The west – along with other rural parts of the country – is falling asleep once more.
This time, though, it might not wake up again.