In
Students and young people drink beer in the vicinity
of the Vietnam National University-Ho Chi Minh City in Thu Duc District.Tuoi Tre
“It will surely be a big disadvantage for your job and business
if you can’t drink beer or wine,” Nguyen Thi Hai Yen, a female student, said.
“If you can’t drink much, try to drink a little initially.
“Girls must drink too.”
This is a common point of view among many students and young
people, white- and blue-collar workers alike, now in Vietnam, a country with
almost 90 million people who drink over three billion liters of beer and
around a billion liters of unregistered home-made alcohol each year.
Many young office workers and students admitted that drinking
beer and wine is an indispensable pleasure in their life, or a way to kill
time or to relieve their boredom.
It is that way of thinking that causes beer restaurants to
mushroom on streets, especially around universities and industrial parks in
the Southeast Asian nation.
A small street of around 100m in length near the
The newly-built
A survey on beer drinking among students and young people in
The survey was targeted at 670 young men, including 470 in
Sixty percent of those polled in the survey were students and
the remaining were young adults.
Most of them said drinking beer and wine is “to well observe
social etiquette and exhibit a proper manner at work” as well as “to help
them build firm friendship.”
This represents a kind of ‘drinking culture’ among Vietnamese people,
especially the young, said Doctor Huynh Van Son, head of the psychology
department at the said education university.
Many of the respondents agreed that drinking is to show they
are adults and to ease negative feelings, stress and sorrow.
Many thought that beer and wine are indispensable in social
interaction in the future.
Mai My Hanh, a lecturer of the psychology department at the
education university who was among the people to conduct the survey, said
many young people seem to have deviant viewpoints on beer and wine
consumption.
They said that they do not agree with any ban on beer and wine
drinking, and that they do not care about the complaints of others against
their alcoholic consumption, Hanh said.
A beer place on
Some even divulged they are willing to steal or borrow money
to buy beer for drinking, she added.
Facing a situation that they would have to present a report or
give a lecture the following day and they are invited by friends to drink
beer, nearly 41 percent replied that they would focus on their work and put
aside the invitation.
But 59 percent chose to accept the invite and go out with
their friends.
In another scenario that the respondents drink some beer at
work and get warned by others, over 54 percent said they would accept the
warning and stop drinking immediately while 46 percent claimed to try to
drink some more.
A survey on the drinking practice of 470 young people in
Young women like drinking beer and wine as well.
Vu Thi Huyen Trang, a 22-year-old student, admitted that she
usually drinks at birthday parties and get-togethers with friends.
“I can drink several bottles of beer just for fun,” Trang
said.
“It’s easier to talk with friends after downing some beer.”
Truong Thi Thu, another student, said women must drink equally
with men at parties but they should be able to control themselves.
Bui Anh Vinh, another student, said, “Drinking is merely a way
to have fun after work and studies.
“The most important thing is you can control yourself.”
Phan Chi Tinh, a waiter at a beer restaurant in Thu Duc
District,
They sing and talk loudly while imbibing beer, Tinh said.
Doctor Son, from the Ho Chi Minh City University of Education,
said 33.5 percent of Vietnamese people do drink beer and wine and 18 percent
overuse alcoholic beverages.
Statistics indicated that one-third of drinkers start drinking
before 20 while 34 percent down beer when they are 14-17 and 57 percent get
into the habit of drinking at 18-21.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Thứ Ba, 22 tháng 9, 2015
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