Pubdate: Thu, 11 Jan 2007 Source: Gateway, The (U of Alberta, CN AB Edu) Copyright: 2007 Gateway Student Journalism Society Contact: http://www.gateway.ualberta.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3149 Author: Micah Brown Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) THE ECONOMICS OF ADDICTION An interesting phenomenon, observable in campuses throughout the world, is the speed at which new ideas are accepted by university students. Some professor or author writes a book, and soon his particular theory is the norm, not the exception, on campus. This tendency of students to attach themselves to the latest academic fad can be beneficial, but it can cause social problems as well as solve them. Consequently, it's important to remember that just because an idea is new, doesn't mean it's progressive. My chosen discipline, economics, isn't immune to this tendency, despite it being known as "the positivist social science." Economists often accept the popular consensus without questioning the premise on which it is based. Take, for example, the policies many economists advocate to deal with the problem of drug addiction: they argue that the legalization of addictive drugs would be socially beneficial. Their reasoning goes as follows: illicit drugs are illegal, so suppliers of the drug will demand a high price for their product as compensation for the risks of going to jail or of death due to gang-related activity. These higher prices in turn end up causing many social problems: addicts engage in theft, prostitution and drug dealing to pay for their fix, and the problem of addiction is spread to every level of society. Thus if anti-drug laws were removed, it follows that drug prices will fall, and the crime associated with addiction and the black market would end, making life better for both addicts and society in general. While this argument makes sense in theory, it's based on the general assumption economists make: that people make rational decisions to maximize their long-term satisfaction. For most people this assumption is reasonable, but can we really apply this condition to the addict? I mean, how many people do you know who set it as a goal to become drug addicts or who rationally choose it? These activities are acts of desperation, not rationality. Addiction is a disease; people who are addicted know that the high won't satisfy them, yet their body demands that they use it. Because of this fact, it's doubtful that legalizing drugs will lower prices substantially, if at all, because an addict will demand drugs no matter what the price. This would cancel out the social benefits of legalization. Furthermore, there's a strong current of libertarian ideology among legalization economist advocates, so we should be all the more skeptical in accepting these conclusions as simply pragmatic. Ultimately, prevention seems to be the best method of dealing with addiction. But to truly make an effort to prevent addiction, we have to ask questions that have uncomfortable answers: what social and economic forces cause addiction? In any event, although legalization of illicit drugs might, theoretically, ease the some of the symptoms of the problem, they won't cure it. Instead, academics should advocate policies that address the causes of addiction, like poverty, abuse and lack of education. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek