“…5 Three policies, the so-called “best buys”, stand out in not only being the most cost-effective policies, but also relatively easy to implement: increasing alcohol prices through taxation or minimum pricing, restricting the temporal and spatial availability of alcoholic beverages, and bans and restrictions of alcohol marketing. 6 , 7 , 8 However, two key questions have not yet been addressed in prior reviews: First, a quantification of their impact on consumption in real-world settings is pending, although their effectiveness, particularly in reducing alcohol-attributable harm, has been well established (for the most recent systematic reviews, see 9 , 10 , 11 ). Second, while systematic differences in both the drinking patterns and the related harms have been observed across both SES 12 , 13 and racial and ethnic groups, 14 , 15 there has been minimal investigation into whether these policies can mitigate against growing inequalities in the alcohol-attributable disease burden through differential effects on alcohol use.…”