Pubdate: Sat, 26 Nov 2016 Source: Packet & Times (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 Orillia Packet and Times Contact: http://www.orilliapacket.com/letters Website: http://www.orilliapacket.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2397 Author: Ian Irvine Page: A4 LEGALIZING POT ISN'T APT TO BE ECONOMIC WINDFALL Several economic myths have surrounded legalization of marijuana. This has maintained the illusion it would be a bonanza for federal and provincial treasuries because of the supposed enormous tax revenues that legalization would generate. The Parliamentary Budget Office in Ottawa is to be congratulated for blowing up some of these myths in its report, published this month, on projected pot tax revenues following legalization in Canada in 2017 or 2018. The first myth is legalization would "create" a market value of more than $20 billion. This number was offered in a recent Deloitte Canada report, taking into account investment. In consumption terms, relatively little will be "created." An illegal market may transform itself into a legal market, with only a small increment in total consumption. Legalization will bring about a displacement of production from private smaller-scale growers to licensed industrial-scale growers. This may turn out to be market enhancing because of labelling requirements, and a greater certainty regarding pharmaceutical content. It will also lead to employment of PhD graduates in chemistry, students with MBAs, lawyers and marketing specialists. Some security jobs will migrate from enforcers to Garda employees. But if the legal market is to supplant the illegal market, it will also create unemployment among the existing growers and distributors. Indeed, rents that accrue will be spread differently - away from small operators and organized crime and toward individuals whose retirement portfolios hold MJ stocks. The published report from the PBO finds total tax revenues from legalized marijuana would come to only about $600 million, with large confidence boundaries around this central number. In contrast, some private-sector commentators have been projecting tax revenues in the billions. The key element in the PBO analysis is its recognition buyers are price sensitive - a big price premium for the legal product could lead users to stick with their existing dealer. This assumption is based on a careful scrutiny of existing economic research. The Canadian illegal market is well developed: Product quality is high and readily available. The PBO simulates projected revenues on the basis of many price differentials. It concludes if the legal market price is only a dollar or two higher than the illegal price, most buyers will migrate to the legal market. But a larger price differential would lead to a low legal market share and lower tax revenues. Experience from two U.S. states highlights the importance of price. In Washington state, the initial tax was almost 100 per cent. As a result, shop prices were $28 per gram, compared to $9 on the street. Unsurprisingly, only 18 per cent of sales went through licensed vendors. In contrast, Colorado applied a rate of about 35 per cent. The shop price was $15 per gram, and about 65 per cent of the estimated market migrated to licensed sellers. Shop prices are slowly declining further, and the share of black market activity is now minimal. Almost all illicit cultivation is bound for out-of-state markets, where the street price is higher. Notwithstanding the many challenges facing the legalization process, the PBO has gotten this process off to an excellent start, with its sober assessment, professional statistical modelling and avoidance of exuberance. The government should use this assessment to craft a law that takes its conclusions into account and avoids the pitfalls experienced in Washington State, and not fall for the illusion that billions of dollars will suddenly fall in its lap. Ian Irvine is an economics professor at Concordia University and an associate researcher with the Montreal Economic Institute. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt