Alko

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Alko
Alko logo
Type Government enterprise
Founded 1932
Headquarters Finland
Key people Jaakko Uotila (President and CEO)
Industry Liquor
Products Alcoholic beverages
Revenue 984.5 million Euro (2005)
Operating income 50.9 million Euro (2005)
Employees 2,584 (2005)
Website www.alko.fi

Alko is the national alcoholic beverage retailing monopoly in Finland. Essentially, it is the only store in the country which retails beer over 4.7% ABV, wine (except in vineyards) and spirits. Alcoholic beverages are also sold in licensed restaurants and bars to ages 18 and up. Alko is required by law to sell drinks with lower alcohol content than 4.7% and non-alcoholic alternatives, but in practice carries a very limited stock of low alcohol beer, cider and non-alcoholic drinks and mixers as supermarkets sell the same products at a lower price.

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As the only means to buy strong retail alcohol in Finland, Alko has an extensive range of products ranging from rare wines to bulk vodka. Its wine selection has grown in recent decades as there has been an increase in consumption and a government drive to change Finnish drinking habits to a more "European" style, which means a move from hard liquor to wine and beer. While wine consumption has increased, this has not replaced consumption of other alcoholic beverages, negating the "Europeanization" argument. Nowadays wines occupy most of the shelf space in an Alko shop. Its beer selection is concentrated on stronger versions of the domestic bulk lagers and some high-quality strong beers from major beer-producing countries as well as traditional Sahti at some locations. Hard spirits include several Finnish brands of vodka and all major types of hard liquor. Alko also sells brands of drinks produced by the Finnish state-owned company Altia, which are traditional products and not sold abroad. Many of these date back to the first products launched after the end of the Prohibition. These are usually for mixing drinks.

Alko is a government-owned enterprise reporting to the Finnish Ministry of Health and Social Affairs. As of 2006, it has 330 shops and 138 order points throughout the country. Under the Alcohol Act, it cannot have a window display, so it usually has just a display of wine glasses and catalogues. Alko can advertise beverages that contain less than 22% alcohol. In practice manufacturers or distributors, not Alko, advertise their products. Printed catalogues have information and prices for all products but Internet pages can show only beverages with less than 22% alcohol. However private individuals have published unofficial over 22% price lists on the Internet.

On the 3 February 2005, the Finnish Food Marketing Association (a pressure group of the country's supermarkets like K-Kauppa and S-Group) asked the European Union to challenge the legality of Alko's monopoly, which it disputes.

A photo from inside the Alko in Kamppi, Helsinki.
A photo from inside the Alko in Kamppi, Helsinki.

Products with under 22% ABV can be purchased by 18 year olds and up. The minimum age for products containing over 22% ABV is 20. When asked at checkout a young person must prove his or her age with an official ID (only a driver's licence, ID card or passport is accepted). Alcohol will not be sold to drunken customers or when there is a reason to suspect misuse or illegal supply to a person who would not be authorized to buy.

During the years 1919 to 1932, the distribution and consumption of alcoholic beverages was forbidden in Finland. When the prohibition was lifted by the Finnish government in 1932 following a referendum, they created a company called Oy Alkoholiliike Ab which was fully owned by the government.

During the 1939-40 Winter War the company mass-produced molotov cocktails for the Finnish military, production totalling 450,000 units.

In 1969 the company's name was changed to Oy Alko Ab. This company not only distributed, but imported and manufactured, alcohol.

In 1995, when Finland joined the EU, the monopolies in production and import had to be lifted. Thus, the corporation was separated into Alko (distribution), Primalco (production) and Havistra (bulk sales), which formed the Altia Group; only Alko retained a monopoly. In 1998, Alko was separated from the Altia Group, and is now entirely separated from it, although Alko continues to be the major customer of Altia. Altia Group (with Primalco and Havistra) was reorganized later to the current Altia.

  • A common question in Finnish quizzes is "How is the figure 543210 important to Finns?". The answer is that the first Alko stores were opened at 10:00, April 5, 1932 (5.4 32 10).
  • Alko was known as pitkäripainen ("the one with long doorhandles") in common language for decades as all Alkos had the same kind of elongated doorhandles.
  • Back in the day when Alko was instituted, bottles were displayed with their bottom toward customers - not displaying the label - on the wall behind the counter. A customer had to know what he wanted and ask the clerk for it. For example, Egri Bikavér was known as Erkin pikakivääri "Erkki's automatic rifle" among many customers. Similarly, Bordeaux blanc was known as Porvoon lankku, "a plank from Porvoo".
  • Alko shops were among the last grocery-style shops in Finland to switch over from desk service to self-service. This happened in the 1980s.

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