![]() ![]() Future years are mostly Statista projections These projections or forecasts are conducted by regression analyses, exponential trend smoothing (ETS) or similar techniques and extrapolate the found historical trend. There are, of course, countries that buck the trend. Only slightly behind are Western European countries. Europe consumes the most alcohol per capita, particularly in Central and Eastern European countries. As new data becomes available or methodologies are adapted to suit changing requirements it can be possible that data is not comparable any longer with previously published data or is changed retroactively according to the new definitions.īecause of the high degree of processing no specific external source can be named for each data point and all data for historical years (usually until the last finished year before the current one) have to be considered Statista estimates. Alcohol consumption across North Africa, the Middle East and the Arab World is particularly low. Most indicators are composites of multiple input sources with slightly varying methodologies that have been processed by our analysts to be aligned and consistent with each other and with all other indicators in the KMI database. Unrecorded denotes alcoholic drinks produced and/or consumed that are not recorded in official statistics of sales, production, or trade. Data for missing countries or regions are imputed by considering known information from other countries or regions that are found to be similar by cluster analyses like k-means or similar procedures. Data for missing years are interpolated by various statistical means, such as linear or exponential interpolation or cubic splines. The nation consumed 54.29 billion liters of alcohol, nearly double the United States, the second ranked country. ![]() These datasets are often incomplete as there are gaps between survey years or no or no reliable information might be available for a specific indicator in a specific country or region. Measured through sales data, overall alcohol consumption averaged 8.7 litres per person across OECD countries in 2019, down from 9.1 litres in 2009 (Figure 4.3). China was the global leader in alcohol consumption by volume in 2018. Whereas primary data are generated via Statista's own surveys like the Global Consumer Survey, secondary input datasets are mostly sourced from international institutions (such as the IMF, the World Bank or the United Nations), national statistical offices, trade associations and from the trade press. The shown forecasts represent a blend of multiple input datasets from both internal (primary) and external (secondary) sources. ![]()
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