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Examines how much Americans spend on drinks by demographics such as: age, income, high-income households, household type, race and Hispanic origin, region of residence, and education. Also presents who-are-the-best-customers analyses of the data, showing the demographics of spending at a glance.
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Who buys alcoholic beverages (beer, wine, whiskey, and other alcoholic beverages) at home, on trips, and at restaurants and bars. Also who buys colas and noncolas, coffee and tea, fruit-flavored drinks, milk, etc.
Beverage industry --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- Non-alcoholic beverage industry --- Consumers
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Based on data collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics' 2013 Consumer Expenditure Survey, this report examines how much Americans spend on both alcoholic and nonalcoholic beverages, all organized by demographics.
Beverage industry --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- Non-alcoholic beverage industry --- Consumers
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Beverage industry --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- Non-alcoholic beverage industry --- Consumers
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The tenth edition of Who's Buying Alcoholic and Nonalcoholic Beverages is based on npublished data collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics' 2012 Consumer Expenditure Survey-you can't get these data online. It examines how much Americans spend on alcoholic and other beverages by the demographics that count-age, income, high-income households, household type, race and Hispanic origin, region of residence, and education.
Beverage industry --- Food consumption --- Consumption (Economics) --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- Non-alcoholic beverage industry --- Consumers
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Who buys beverages at home, on trips, and at restaurants and bars.
Alcoholic beverage industry -- United States -- Statistics -- Periodicals. --- Beverage industry -- United States -- Statistics -- Periodicals. --- Consumers -- United States -- Statistics -- Periodicals. --- Non-alcoholic beverage industry -- United States -- Statistics -- Periodicals. --- Beverage industry --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- Non-alcoholic beverage industry --- Consumers
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"This book applies the concept of fermentation as a mechanism through which to understand and analyze processes of landscape change and cultural change as related to the production and consumption of fermented products"--
Landscape changes. --- Ecological disturbances. --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- Environmental aspects.
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Varietals of Capitalism shows that politics is an omnipresent part of the economics of wine and of economic activity in general. Based on a four-year research project encompassing fieldwork in France, Spain, Italy, and Romania, Xabier Itçaina, Antoine Roger, and Andy Smith examine the causes and effects of a radical reform adopted at the EU level in 2008. Regulatory change politically transformed the rationale of EU support to the wine industry, from shaping the supply side to encouraging producers to adapt to the demands of a supposedly "new consumer."To explain the adoption and impact of the reform, the authors develop an analytical framework to capture the actors-their perceptions, preferences, and interdependencies-within an industry crisscrossed by institutions located at the global, European, national, and local scales. This framework combines concepts and lessons from historical institutionalism and regulationist economics, Bourdieu's field theory, and the sociology of public policymaking. The authors reject accounts that attribute policy change simply to material determinants and "the invisible hand of the market." They emphasize the crucial importance of institutions within sectors of the economy, and propose ways to bolster constructivist approaches to political economy by linking industrial change to scientific and bureaucratic balances of power. This book's novel focus on different levels of institutional impact should prove influential in the study of the politics of industry, and more broadly within the comparative analysis of capitalism.
E-books --- Wine industry --- Economic aspects --- Government policy --- Alcoholic beverage industry
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How a small family company in the Finger Lakes became one of the most important wine producers in the United States, only to be taken down by corporate greed and mismanagement.
Wine industry --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- History. --- Taylor Wine Company --- History --- E-books
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The Margaret River region of Australia's south-west is internationally renowned for its award-winning wines. There are now more than 200 wineries, predominantly boutique style, in the region, producing more than 20% of Australia's premium wine market.The Way It Was tells the story of the early days of the region's wine industry, from the first plantings by Dr Tom Cullity in 1967 through an informative text and many illustrations.
Wine industry --- Wineries --- Alcoholic beverage industry --- Beverage processing plants --- Viticulture --- Wine and wine making --- E-books
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