The study uses a mathematical model to suggest that lowering the drinking age would not reduce binge drinking. However, there are significant problems with the study and its conclusion:
- The study is purely theoretical, not empirical.
- The only empirical data considered is current self-reported survey data where the drinking age is 21, which may be biased, and levels of enforcement in various colleges.
- The definition of "heavy episodic drinking" is questionable in the absence of context.
- The study modeled a change in the drinking age to 19, not 18.
- The study only looked at two variables--"misperception" (social norms) and "wetness" (availability/enforcement).
- Most campuses are actually very "wet" in practice.
- Variables such as the dangerous effects of forcing alcohol underground are not considered.
- Consequences of drinking were not considered.
We at Twenty-One Debunked also find it rather funny that the authors of the study said that lowering the drinking age to 18 would be a "radical social experiment," when in fact, the current drinking age of 21 is the real radical social experiment, both internationally and in terms of our nation's own history. And a failed one nonetheless.
If my knowledge of American social history is correct, early America had no drinking age at all. "Drink your whiskey, Johnny", must have been a common phrase back in Colonial times.
ReplyDeleteIndeed, that was true. The first state to have any drinking age at all was Wiscosnin in 1833 (18 for wine and liquor, no age limit for beer), then raised to 21 in 1866 to match the age of majority at the time. Before Prohibition in 1920-1933, only a few states had any legal drinking age age at all.
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