OK. Serious question. Do you really believe there are 'a lot' of people 'here' who can't afford wine? I'm not sure by 'here' if you mean this list or the UK so if you could clarify that. And I'm not sure what you think you need to pay for a half-decent bottle of wine (but I never spend more than £5.50). But really. Seriously. Do you really think 'a lot' of people can't afford that?
Perhaps the Food Standards Agency can help
"
Food Standards Agency (FSA) research suggests some poor people miss meals or do without healthy food due to financial pressure. One third of unemployed people have cut out meals or reduced the quality of their diet due to lack of cash. 8% of respondents to a survey have low or very low food security, implying just under four million adults regularly struggle to get enough to eat.
Or this Institute of Fiscal Studies report
"IFS analysis showed a “clear threat” to working people’s living standards, while the Liberal Democrats said that the “savage cuts” would make millions of households poorer. Projected benefit cuts will lead to the poorest working-age households losing between 4% and 10% of their income a year, according to the IFS.
[54] Fewer than one in ten British people believe all work is fair and decent, and 75% think more should be done to make work fairer. Many British people suffer insecure work with zero hours contracts.
[55] Nearly half of workers are anxious over basic household expenses like food, transport and energy. One in six workers had left the heating off despite it being cold to save on fuel bills, and similar numbers had pawned possessions in the previous year because they were short of money.
[56] Rents are rising and housing benefit is not rising to match this. Families are forced into increasing poverty, some facing a daily struggle to pay their rent and put food on their table. Some risk
homelessness. Families with children are most affected and two thirds of affected families are in work.
[57] Homelessness has risen over the last six years and the
National Audit Office thinks welfare reforms and a freeze in housing benefit are a likely cause.
And this is just a tiny sample of the sort of reports no one chooses to believe
So yes unless 4 million can be described as "Not a lot" I do think there are lots of people who can't afford wine. and having been born during the war and brought up on Rationing, i know what hungry people look and how they feel too