Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 2002 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2002 Contact: http://www.ft.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/154 Author: Martin Wolf THE FOLLY OF PROHIBITING DRUGS European Countries Are Starting To Realise That A Policy Of Retribution Against Drug Addicts Is Both Immoral And Stupid Small chinks are opening in the wall of stupidity that surrounds drug policy. In the US, a few brave souls are challenging the "war on drugs" - a euphemism for a war upon its citizens. The Netherlands and Switzerland are experimenting with decriminalisation. And, last week, a report from a select committee of the House of Commons even opened a few holes in British government policy. It is regrettably timid but still a small step in the right direction. Fresh thought is desperately needed. In the early 1970s the UK followed the US into the war on drugs, with disastrous results. According to Transform, a British campaigning group, "in 1970 there were just over 1,000 heroin users. By 2000 that figure had grown to at least 200,000." According to the British crime survey for 2000, a third of those aged 16-59 had used illegal drugs, mostly cannabis, at some point in their lives. Of 9.5m young people aged 16 to 29, some 2.3m had used an illicit drug in 2000 alone. Supply has not been halted: street prices of drugs have fallen over the past 12 years, not risen. Yet prohibition has inflicted substantial collateral damage. Ten per cent of all British people sent to prison in 2000 were convicted of drug offences. On some estimates, a third of all property theft is drug-related. Overwhelmingly, these criminals, have been the so-called "problematic drug users" - estimated to number 250,000. Each of these people spends an average of about Pounds 16,500 a year on drugs, of which about Pounds 13,000 is the proceeds of crime. Prohibition also creates an illegal market in the UK worth an estimated Pounds 6.6bn a year - a honeypot for organised criminals. But drugs are a global industry. Consider what it has done to Afghanistan and Colombia. Thus, "if we judge whether the existing drugs policy is working by measurable reductions in the number of people who use drugs, the number who die or suffer harm as a result, the supply of drugs, the amount of crime committed to get money to buy drugs and the organised criminality involved in transporting and supplying drugs, we have to say that the results are not coming through." The radicals making this damning judgment are the Association of Chief Police Officers, no less. There are three broad responses to the failures of this "war": moralistic, libertarian and utilitarian. Moralists believe that the right response to failure is to try harder. In the US, federal government spending on anti-drug programmes rose from Dollars 900m in 1979 to Dollars 18bn (Pounds 12.3bn) in 1999. For moralists, the taking of drugs is downright wicked. William J. Bennett, America's first drugs tsar, argued that users of drugs were "slaves" of their vice. These slaves must be forced to be free - by being incarcerated, if necessary. This Orwellian policy is stupid and immoral - stupid, because it does not work, and wicked, because the harm done by users to themselves is modest compared to the harm done by the state to users. As authors of an excellent book from the Washington-based Cato Institute argue, in attempting to stop people doing what they want, the state is forced to act in ever more intrusive, coercive and, in the US, simply unconstitutional ways. The libertarian response is that, in the words of one of the Cato Institute's authors, "we cannot protect free adults from their own choices and we should not use the force of law to try". I find this position persuasive. Others, alas, do not. For this reason, it is necessary to focus on the third approach: the utilitarian one of harm reduction. Drugs are harmful - but so is prohibition. The utilitarian's approach is to reduce the total harm to a minimum. Along with restricting supply, policy should aim at reducing demand, educating potential users, treating drug abusers and minimising harmful consequences for public health. Someone committed to harm reduction could be a legaliser, since dangerous substances become more harmful if illegal and unregulated. But this combination is rare. This is partly because of fear of public opprobrium. It is also because of the concern that legalisation would lead to increased use (a concern that heavy taxation can alleviate but cannot eliminate). The latter worry leads the House of Commons committee to end up opposing the idea of legalisation, even though it recognises - a remarkable step in itself - that in future "the balance may tip in favour of legalising and regulating some types of presently illegal drugs". The result is a series of modest but useful reforms. These include: focusing the whole of policy not on casual users but on the most problematic drug abusers; reclassification of cannabis, in line with the proposals of Jack Straw, the home secretary, as a class C drug (the least harmful category); and reclassification of ecstasy as less harmful than either heroin or cocaine. In addition, the report argues there should be: a substantial increase in treatment places for cocaine abusers; universal availability of methadone treatments; and complementary therapies for heroin users. It also recommends creating an evaluated pilot programme of safe houses for injections by heroin abusers, with a view to extending the programme across the country; and a pilot programme for structured heroin prescription, on the lines of the Dutch and Swiss programmes. All this should be helpful, so far as it goes, which is not far enough. But the crucial point in the report is the admission that "if there is any single lesson from the experience of the last 30 years, it is that policies based wholly or mainly on enforcement (of prohibition) are destined to fail". It follows that "harm reduction rather than retribution should be the primary focus of policy towards users of illegal drugs". Bravo! The UK is at last moving out of the US-led camp of hysterical moralists. Now it can start to think seriously. Sensible policies would provide treatment and hope for the drug-dependent, not punishment; they would deprive gangsters of their income, not try to push prices higher; they would provide honest information to potential users, not offer lies; they would reduce threats to public safety, not increase incentives for crime; and they would limit the spread of disease, not promote it. The UK debate is improving. In time, policy may even reduce the costs of drug abuse, not raise them. References can be found at www.ft.com/martinwolf --- MAP posted-by: Beth