One thing we do know is that as we look out around the world, Canada has the lowest average gross margins available to people who make spirits. When we sell our product to one of the liquor boards, what we get back is about 18¢ of the retail dollar. For everything we do, from buying the grain, to making it, to aging it, to marketing it, everything, we get 18¢.
In Europe, where we have significant competitors in the Scotch whisky industry and the Irish whisky industry, their gross margins are around 30%. In America, where they make bourbon, and Tennessee whisky and straight whiskies, their margins are even a little bit higher. Their gross margins are about 32%.
We're a global industry. The spirits industry has been a global industry since the 1960s. The beer industry in Canada is global industry today, with the three large brewers. The wine industry is a global business. The largest winery in Canada, Vincor, is owned by one of my member companies. We're all global players.
You're sitting at the table, and you have the Scotch whisky guy from a company, and you have the Irish guy from the same company, and you have the Canadian whisky guy, and the bourbon guy, and you're trying to allocate where you're going to invest to grow your business. Canada is losing right now because the return on that investment is just not there. It makes more sense, if you're that company, to put that money behind Scotch whisky, or Irish whisky, or bourbon, than it does to put in behind Canadian whisky. We need to fix that.
One of the biggest hurdles we're facing is the ability to attract investment from the global community behind Canadian whisky. We're so lucky. We're a small country that has one of the four uniquely recognized whiskies in the world, but we have our hands tied behind our back, and we need to fix that.