Pubdate: Wed, 09 Jun 2004 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2004 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Eric Beauchesne, CanWest News Service Note: Read the full 40 page study http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/admin/books/files/Marijuana.pdf Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) LEGALIZE, TAX POT FOR $2-B TAKE, THINK-TANK SAYS Why Let Criminals Profit? Professor Asks OTTAWA -- Marijuana should be legalized, then taxed like any other product, says a study by an economic think-tank. The Fraser Institute estimates that such a move would easily generate more than $2 billion a year in additional tax revenue. All that would really change is that governments, rather than criminals, would enjoy the spoils, argues the study being released today by the Vancouver-based institute. The potential tax revenue is based on the study's estimate that in British Columbia alone, the annual marijuana crop, if valued at retail street prices and sold by the cigarette, is worth more than $7 billion. "Using conservative assumptions about Canadian consumption, this could translate into potential revenues for the government of over $2 billion," the study states. "In British Columbia, as in other provinces, notably Quebec and Ontario, it is a significant crop that fuels organized crime." Study author Stephen Easton, professor of economics at Simon Fraser University and a senior fellow at the institute, estimates that there are as many as 17,500 marijuana grow operations in B.C. alone. Marijuana is widely produced and about one-quarter of Canadians admit to having used it, the study says. As such, the broader social question has become not whether to approve or disapprove of production, but rather who should enjoy the spoils. "If we treat marijuana like any other commodity, we can tax it, regulate it and use the resources the industry generates rather than continue a war against consumption and production that has long since been lost," Easton said. "It is apparent that we are reliving the experience of alcohol prohibition of the early years of the last century." In British Columbia, indoor marijuana cultivation and consumption appears to be higher than in the rest of Canada, the study notes. The most striking difference is that only 13 per cent of offenders in the province are actually charged, a number that climbs to 60 per cent for the rest of Canada. In addition, the penalties for conviction in B.C. are low, the study said. Fifty-five per cent of those convicted receive no jail time. A modest grow operation of 100 plants generates $80,000 a year in gross revenue, and with production costs of about $25,000, the potential return on invested money is a high 55 per cent, the study says. It currently costs $1.50 to produce a marijuana cigarette, which sells for $8.60. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake