Pubdate: Fri, 31 Mar 2000
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company
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Author: Peter Reuter
Note: Peter Reuter, a visiting fellow at the Urban Institute, teaches in 
the School of Public Affairs, University of Maryland.

ONE TOUGH PLANT

WASHINGTON -- The $1.3 billion in aid approved by the House yesterday
to help Colombia's faltering government combat narcotics trafficking
may be good politics, but it is based on bad economics. And it is
unlikely to stem the flow of South American cocaine into the United
States.

The backers of the bill, as well as the Clinton administration, which
requested a similar aid package, argue that rebuilding Colombia's weak
military would help the government defeat the leftist guerrillas who
protect the coca farmers, or at least force the guerrillas to the
bargaining table. This, in turn, would allow the government to attack
coca fields directly and help farmers make the shift to legal crops.

The problem is that for the guerrillas, the coca industry is essential
(since the money that growers pay them for protection provides nearly
half of their estimated $100 million annual revenue), but for the coca
growers and refiners the rebels are a convenience, not a necessity.
Without the guerrillas' protection, the farmers may have to move to
smaller and more dispersed plots, which is inconvenient and costly.
But this would have little effect on the price of cocaine on the
street in the United States.

It costs cocaine refiners only 30 cents to purchase the coca leaf
needed to produce a gram of cocaine, which sells for about $150 in the
United States. Even if the price of the leaves needed for that gram of
the finished product doubled, the change in retail price would be
negligible. And if retail prices do not rise, then consumption in the
United States will not decline.

Cocaine refiners will always pay what they need to pay to get the
leaves to meet demand. This is, after all, an agricultural market and
is subject to the same economic laws that govern markets for legal
crops.

The aid money, which is part of a $12.7 billion spending package that
faces a tough battle in the Senate, also provides money to help coca
farmers develop alternative crops like pineapple. But helping farmers
earn more money growing legal crops by giving them cheap seeds,
subsidized processing plants and better roads assumes that the price
of the coca leaf will not increase enough to tempt the farmers back to
growing it. Cocaine refiners would offer a high enough price to get
back the land and labor needed to meet the needs of the cocaine market.

Many who support the aid package point to the success of efforts in
Bolivia and Peru, where land under coca cultivation is down to 145,000
acres in 1999 from 370,000 in 1992. But there is little evidence that
intervention in Peru and Bolivia has lowered coca production in South
America as a whole. As acreage devoted to coca farming in Bolivia and
Peru decreased, cocaine acreage in Colombia increased to 300,000 acres
in 1999 from 90,000 acres in 1992. Even if coca farming is pared back
in Colombia, it will likely increase again in Bolivia and Peru.

Washington seems fixated on trying to solve America's drug problem
through intervention in other countries. That only a tiny fraction of
the federal drug-control budget goes for overseas programs is a source
of frustration to hawks and liberals alike: hawks want more for crop
eradication; liberals want more money to help farmers grow alternative
crops. Neither side seems willing to accept that these actions can do
little but shift the location of crop production. In the end, the only
way to win the drug war will be to change the behavior of Americans,
not of farmers in the third world.
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