Considering marijuana legalization carefully: insights for other jurisdictions from analysis for Vermont
- PMID: 28075542
- DOI: 10.1111/add.13289
Considering marijuana legalization carefully: insights for other jurisdictions from analysis for Vermont
Abstract
Background and aims: In 2014 the legislature of Vermont, USA passed a law requiring the Secretary of Administration to report on the consequences of legalizing marijuana. The RAND Corporation was commissioned to write that report. This paper summarizes insights from that analysis that are germane to other jurisdictions.
Method: Translation of key findings from the RAND Corporation report to the broader policy debate.
Results: Marijuana legalization encompasses a wide range of possible regimes, distinguished along at least four dimensions: which organizations are allowed to produce and supply the drug, the regulations under which they operate, the nature of the products that can be distributed and taxes and prices. Vermont's decriminalization had already cut its costs of enforcing marijuana prohibition against adults to about $1 per resident per year. That is probably less than the cost of regulating a legal market. Revenues from taxing residents' purchases after legalization could be many times that amount, so the main fiscal cost of prohibition after decriminalization relative to outright legalization may be foregone tax revenues, not enforcement costs. Approximately 40 times as many users live within 200 miles of Vermont's borders as live within the state; drug tourism and associated tax revenues will be important considerations, as will be the response of other states. Indeed, if another state legalized with lower taxes, that could undermine the ability to collect taxes on even Vermont residents' purchases.
Conclusions: Analysis of possible outcomes if Vermont, USA, legalized marijuana reveal that choices about how, and not just whether, to legalize a drug can have profound consequences for the effects on health and social wellbeing, and the choices of one jurisdiction can affect the options and incentives available to other jurisdictions.
Keywords: Cannabis; decriminalization; drug policy; legalization; markets; policy analysis.
© 2016 Society for the Study of Addiction.
Comment in
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Expected lessons from the US experience with alternative cannabis policy regimes.Addiction. 2016 Dec;111(12):2090-2091. doi: 10.1111/add.13368. Epub 2016 Apr 15. Addiction. 2016. PMID: 27079146 No abstract available.
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The commercial focus of US cannabis regulation models should not close our eyes to other options.Addiction. 2016 Dec;111(12):2092-2094. doi: 10.1111/add.13383. Epub 2016 May 3. Addiction. 2016. PMID: 27145329 No abstract available.
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Legal regulated markets have the potential to reduce population levels of harm associated with cannabis use.Addiction. 2016 Dec;111(12):2091-2092. doi: 10.1111/add.13390. Epub 2016 May 3. Addiction. 2016. PMID: 27145424 No abstract available.
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Economic insights on market structure and competition.Addiction. 2016 Dec;111(12):2094-2095. doi: 10.1111/add.13458. Epub 2016 Jul 16. Addiction. 2016. PMID: 27422365 No abstract available.
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The US as an example of how not to legalize marijuana?Addiction. 2016 Dec;111(12):2095-2096. doi: 10.1111/add.13498. Epub 2016 Jul 26. Addiction. 2016. PMID: 27460874 No abstract available.
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