Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jun 2004 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2004, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Mary Lynn Young Note: Mary Lynn Young is an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia's School of Journalism. Note: Read the full 40 page study http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/admin/books/files/Marijuana.pdf Cited: Neil Boyd's 'High Society' http://www.neilboyd.net/pages/pub.html#Anchor-High-35882 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) THE LUCRATIVE BUSINESS OF POT Ask any of the 17,500 marijuana grow ops in British Columbia about revenue, and according to the results of a new study, the answer would be booming. In fact, the study, commissioned by the Fraser Institute, estimates that the underground B.C. industry is worth $7-billion -- the largest in the country. The report claims that the sector is doing so well -- almost as strong as the province's forestry industry, which posted $9-billion in revenue for 2004 -- that B.C. should legalize the drug and tax it. The conservative think tank said it doesn't necessarily endorse the political conclusions in the report. But are things really so tough in this officially have-not province that we need to resort to a major social, political and legal re-engineering of how the system deals with cannabis? The issue of legalizing marijuana is much more complex than the report suggests. First, the report's estimates of the size of the underground industry are inflated because of the way the calculations were completed and the fact that they are based on data from a sector not given to filing quarterly reports. Second, marijuana is a controlled substance, which falls under federal law. That means the Canadian government would have to change its laws before anything could happen provincially. Nevertheless, when added to the state of the provincial economy and marijuana use in B.C., there is a certain logic to the report's conclusions. In this respect, by virtue of limited police enforcement, B.C. has de facto decriminalized marijuana use. For instance, according to figures from Statistics Canada, only 13 per cent of offenders arrested in B.C. for marijuana offences are charged compared with 60 per cent for the rest of Canada. As well, the report claims that B.C. has low penalties for conviction of cultivation offences, with 55 per cent of individuals convicted in Vancouver receiving no jail time. Here, the province is implicitly following a trend similar to a number of European nations and some Australian states that have decriminalized cannabis. However, the drug is still illegal in those regions and therefore not traded as a taxable commodity. The Netherlands is the only country where marijuana products can be legally sold and are subject to indirect taxation. There are strong arguments to decriminalize the drug, given the fact that its illegal status is largely a function of poor branding and accidents of history. Marijuana use became a criminal offence in Canada in 1923 at the same time that technological improvements allowed the mass production of another drug, cigarettes, according to Neil Boyd's well-known book on the history of drug policy in Canada, titled High Society. At the time, marijuana was largely denigrated socially and then legally because it was associated with jazz musicians, madness and promiscuity. History also offers some lessons about the economic benefit of allowing the market to regulate morality as opposed to legislation or the criminal justice system. For instance, by the late 1920s when the provinces repealed prohibition laws, alcohol became the focal point of a profitable industry in Canada. This shows that at least from an economic point of view, moving to deregulate or decriminalize certain commodities considered immoral or linked to immorality, such as alcohol and more recently gambling in B.C., can create a powerful economic sector that provides financial benefits for the larger community. Social factors and costs make this economic argument more complex. For instance, critics worry that decriminalizing or legalizing marijuana will encourage tobacco smoking. And legalization raises issues such as age, driving and potency restrictions. So while the report is correct in pointing out that the province is missing out on a large amount of revenue related to the underground drug economy, the question becomes whether the public is ready to see marijuana cigarettes sold at the liquor store. But from a business perspective, when almost one in four Canadians (not some criminal underclass) admit to having used marijuana -- whether they 'inhaled' or not -- that's a hefty market for a budding industry. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake