| E-Malt.com News article: USA: Congress could strip Samuel Adams of its craft beer crown
Congress is ready to get into the craft beer business, which could mean bad news for big batch craft brewers like Sam Adams, Time reported on June 25.
Senator Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, proposed the new Craft Beverage Modernization and Tax Reform Act that would give the U.S. government the right to define who is and isn’t a craft brewer.
The law essentially redefines the tax structure for small to mid-size brewers and would, accordingly, group them into three categories based on new excise taxes.
The craft brewers, those producing under 2 million barrels per year would get the deepest tax cuts.
The mid-size brewers, those producing 6 million barrels or less, get a slight tax break.
The macro brewers don’t get a tax break beyond their first 6 million barrels of production.
It’s a technicality, essentially a quirk of the law that would group companies for tax purposes. But, it would leave a number of big-name craft brewers out of the first category and in a higher tax bracket. That includes Boston Beer Co., which produces 4.1 million barrels as well as Yuengling (2.7 million barrels) and North American Breweries (about 2.6 million barrels).
Until now, to be labelled a craft beer, breweries had to fit within restrictions designated by the Brewers Association craft beer industry group that involved barrels of production, percentage of a brewery owned by a non-craft brewer and more “traditional” aspects.
The industry self-policer has been somewhat accommodating to its peers in years past. It raised the barrel-production limit to 6 million from 2 million in 2010 to allow Boston Beer to lay claim to the craft beer title.
26 June, 2015
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