Pubdate: Tue, 07 Apr 2009 Source: Financial Times (UK) Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 2009 Contact: http://www.ft.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/154 Author: Nicholas Timmins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Cited: Transform http://www.tdpf.org.uk/ CALL TO REVIEW DRUGS LEGALISATION Legalising heroin and cocaine would bring net benefits of billions of pounds even if usage doubled as a result, according to a drugs policy charity. Transform, a charity founded to challenge the validity of drugs policy, carried out what it claimed was the first thoroughgoing analysis of the costs and benefits of prohibition compared with a legal, controlled market. It found the policy of prohibition "is delivering precisely the opposite of the government's stated claims". The charity said that problems caused by drugs were on the increase across the board: supply and availability were growing; harm to health was rising; half of all property crime was to fund drug abuse; the courts and prison systems were overloaded; and illicit drug profits enriched criminals and destabilised countries. The Home Office argues the benefits of legalisation would be outweighed by the costs. But Transform maintains that the Home Office has never undertaken a full assessment. Steve Rolles, Transform's head of research, said research to fill "substantial gaps" must be commissioned, and a full academic study undertaken along with independent analysis by the Audit Commission. It calculates that the combined costs of prohibition in the UK amount to almost UKP 17bn ($24bn) a year in health, crime and other costs. The costs of a regulated market, including prescriptions and infrastructure costs, would be just under UKP 6bn, assuming no change in usage. If usage fell by half, net benefits would be about UKP 14bn, Transform said. Even if it doubled, there would be a net gain of more than UKP 4.5bn as the costs of crime fell but health and social care costs rose. The comparison involves a speculative comparison of the costs and benefits of legalisation. Mr Rolles said: "Even by the government's own measures it is now clear that drug enforcement is causing more harm than the drugs themselves. There can no longer be any excuses for not carrying out a comprehensive impact assessment to count the costs of its drugs policy." The Home Office said: "Legalisation would risk a huge increase in consumption with an associated cost to public health. It would not eliminate the crime committed by organised career criminals." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom