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    "

    THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF LEGALIZING MARIJUANA

    by

    David Glauser

    A Senior Honors Thesis Submitted to the Faculty ofThe University of Utah

    In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the

    Honors Degree in Bachelor of Science

    In

    Economics

    Approved:

    ____________________ ____________________David Kiefer Thomas MaloneySupervisor Chair, Department of Economics

    ____________________ ____________________Cihan Bilginsoy Dr. Sylvia D. TortiDepartment Honors Advisor Dean, Honors College

    May 2012

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    ""

    ABSTRACT

    Marijuana legalization would offer an important advantage over decriminalization

    in that it would allow for legal distribution and taxation of cannabis as well as decrease

    costly enforcement and incarceration expenses. Despite these costly enforcement

    efforts, marijuana is the most commonly used illicit drug in America. According to a

    survey done in 2008 by the National Institute of Drug Abuse, 42% of 12th graders in the

    United States have used marijuana at some point in their life.

    High demands for marijuana likely indicate that legalization of the drug would

    have an enormous effect on the American economy. In a time of economic recession and

    government debt of record proportions, it is extremely beneficial to look into the possible

    advantages and disadvantages of such legislation. By comparing different studies done

    by various organizations and departments as well as analyzing areas that have already

    legalized marijuana, such as the Netherlands, I was able to determine approximately how

    the economy would be affected on several different issues. Some figures that would be

    affected are: employment, the demand for marijuana, taxation rates and potential

    government revenue, incarceration and enforcement costs, and social issues such as

    rehabilitation programs. According to my research, the United States government would

    experience an increase of $25,963,686,520 towards their budget.

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    ABSTRACT ii

    INTRODUCTION 1

    ELACTISITY AND ESTIMATED DEMAND 4

    PRICE AND TAXATION 10

    SOCIAL COSTS 16

    ENFORCEMENT COSTS 23

    CONCLUSION 28

    REFERENCES 31

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    #

    INTRODUCTION

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    In America, over the past three decades, we have witnessed a stormy and

    controversial debate about the possible results to society that might occur from

    decriminalizing or legalizing marijuana. Beginning with Oregon in 1973, a total of 12

    states (Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, New York,

    Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, and Ohio) have altered their existing laws to reduce

    the penalties for marijuana possession. Perhaps the most powerful and appealing

    argument for marijuana decriminalization is the effect that it would have on the economy

    and government budget. Legalization appears to be in the near future. A 2011 Gallup

    poll showed a record-high 50% of Americans now say the use of marijuana should be

    made legal. That is an increase from 46% in a similar poll from the year before. Gallup

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    first held a poll on the issue in 1969 when only 16% of the population approved of

    legalization.

    (Newport, 2011)

    Marijuana, derived from the hemp plant called Cannabis sativa, is the most

    commonly used illicit drug in the United States (Mauer 2005). It is a dry, shredded green

    and brown mix of flowers, stems, seeds, and leaves that is usually smoked as a joint or in

    a pipe, although it can also be smoked in blunts, mixed in food, or brewed as tea. The

    main active chemical in marijuana is delta-9-tetrahydrocannibinol (THC).

    When someone inhales marijuana, THC rapidly passes from the lungs into the

    bloodstream, which carries the chemical to the brain and other organs throughout the

    body. The THC acts upon specific sites in the brain, called cannabinoid receptors,

    kicking off a series of cellular reactions that ultimately lead to the high that users

    experience when they use marijuana. Different areas of the brain have differing numbers

    of cannabinoid receptors, which explains why marijuana affects functions of the brain.

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    Areas of the brain that influence pleasure, memory, thinking, concentration, sensory and

    time perception, and coordinated movement have the highest density of cannabinoid

    receptors. These effects are short term, usually lasting a few hours.

    A realistic concern associated with marijuana is whether or not users will become

    addicted. Like many of the health effects of marijuana use, there is no easy answer to

    this question. The large majority of people who try marijuana do so experimentally and

    never become addicted. Unlike other substances, cannabis has very few withdrawal

    symptoms and most people can quit rather easily. Any withdrawal symptoms are

    typically rare and minor but can include anxiety, depression, nausea, and sleep

    disturbances. Marijuana is especially un-addictive when compared to other substances.

    Marijuana is often times compared to drugs like alcohol, cocaine, and heroin. However,

    when discussing addiction, a much more appropriate comparison would be to caffeine. A

    health professional survey ranked the inherent addictive potential of numerous drugs on a

    100-point scale. Nicotine recorded a 99 point rating, alcohol 81, caffeine 70, and

    marijuana 22. According to the Paul Gahlinger, who conducted the research, Most

    marijuana users even those with long-term, heavy use- experienced no withdrawal

    when they stop. Some people have reported generally mild symptoms (Gahlinger 2004).

    Another study by Dr. Jann Gumbiner found that only about 8% of marijuana users

    develop a serious addiction, either psychological or physical (Gumbiner 2010). This is a

    relatively small number when compared to other drugs. The same study found that 32%

    of tobacco users will become seriously addicted, 23% of heroine users, 17% of cocaine

    users, and 15% of alcohol users.

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    The potential medicinal properties of marijuana have been the subject of

    substantive research and heated debate. Scientists have confirmed that the cannabis plant

    contains active ingredients with therapeutic potential for relieving pain, controlling

    nausea, stimulating appetite, and decreasing ocular pressure. Cannabinoid-based

    medications include synthetic compounds, such as dronabinol and nabilone, which have

    been approved by the Food and Drug Adminitration (FDA). Scientists are continuing to

    investigate the medicinal properties of THC and other cannabinoids to better evaluate and

    harness their ability to help patients suffering from a broad range of conditions, while

    avoiding the adverse effects of smoked marijuana.

    Research on the long-term effects of marijuana use on the brain has yielded

    inconsistent results. Although it is somewhat necessary when calculating economic

    effects, the main objective of this paper is not to discuss the different arguments

    associated with the debatable aspects of health effects from marijuana use. A basic

    knowledge has been provided which will allow the remainder of this paper to focus on

    economic effects.

    ELACTISITY AND ESTIMATED DEMAND

    In order to begin to comprehend the widespread impact, prevalence, and price

    of marijuana if decriminalized, we must first estimate how demand would be effected. If

    the ban on Marijuana were to be lifted, there would undoubtedly be a short-term increase

    in demand for the drug. Illegality is currently a major deterrent for use of the drug as

    penalties for possession of marijuana can be very severe. Access to the drug is also

    limited, although the drug tends to be readily available in many areas. The elimination of

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    a risk of penalization and increased availability would combine with social excitement to

    create a rise in the short-term demand of the drug. The long-term demand is much more

    difficult to predict.

    First, it is important to realize that marijuana, despite its criminalization, is

    widely used by a large portion of the American population. In 2003 the Library of

    Congress released a report that presented data, which reported; that 96.9% of state and

    local law enforcement agencies nationwide describe the availability of marijuana as high

    or medium, only 1.8% describe it as low. Overall, in an average year between 1991 and

    2005, 58.44% of the public referred to marijuana as readily available (Fuju 2007). A

    recent national survey conducted by the federal government reported that 25.8 million

    people, or nearly one out of ten residents, use marijuana at least once a year. Over 6% of

    the population reported to use the drug on a monthly basis, while 47% of adults claim to

    have tried marijuana at some point in their lives (Bates, 2004). According to a survey by

    the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, an average of 20.5 million people have

    used marijuana per year from 1990 to 2005. This amount peaked in 2002 at 25.9 million

    and hit its lowest level in 1992 at 17.4 million.

    Marijuana use is likely underreported. A recent study issued by the Substance

    Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) provides additional data

    on this trend. Comparing self-reporting of marijuana use within the past month with

    urine testing of the same subjects indicated that 40% of the individuals who tested

    positive for marijuana use had declined to accurately report their marijuana use prior to

    urine testing (Harrison, 2007). If, as suggested by ONDCP and SAMSHA, illicit drug

    use is under-reported, then it is reasonable to inflate reports of marijuana use by two-

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    thirds (reflecting the 40% under-reporting of use in the SAMSHA report). This leads to

    the conclusion that the number of annual marijuana users in the United States is closer to

    41 million annually than 25 million. Unlike alcohol and tobacco, marijuana users are

    disproportionately younger males, suggesting that the use of the drug reflects a youthful

    experimentation pattern rather than a long-term life pattern of consistent use (Harrison

    2007). This illustrates that marijuana is a low risk for physical addiction with most users

    weaning themselves off the drug. It is unlikely that making it more available would have

    a significant increase on these well-established use patterns.

    The claim that decriminalizing Marijuana would lead to increased use assumes

    that prohibition is somewhat effective, in that it deters some from using the somewhat

    readily available drug. (Claiming prohibition to be effective is different than claiming it

    to be successful, which would necessitate an analysis of whether the benefits outweigh

    the costs. It is not merely enough that consumption decreases, but that the decrease is

    significant enough to warrant the hefty expenditures.) There are two main ways in which

    criminalizing marijuana could decrease consumption. The first being that its illegality

    increases price and consequently reduces demand. The second way in which prohibition

    can decrease consumption is by fear of penalty for the consumer. Regardless of which of

    these theories is the driving force, determining how effective prohibition is on reducing

    consumption will provide a good idea of how use will adjust if marijuana is

    decriminalized. Several studies have been conducted in an attempt to analyze the

    effectiveness of both prohibition-caused reasons for refraining from marijuana use.

    First, we will take a look at studies analyzing the elasticity of marijuana

    demand. According to Pacula (2001), marijuana use was found to be extremely inelastic.

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    The elasticity of demand with respect to price was -0.06. Therefore, a 1% increase in

    price results in only a 0.06% decline in demand. In other words, if price increased by

    16.67%, demand would respond with a 1% decrease. DeSimone and Farrelly (2003)

    found similar results, concluding that, adult marijuana demand was not related to its

    own price. They also found price to be irrelevant for the more common users, juveniles.

    However, regardless of age, many theorize that use will decrease with increases

    in arrest probability. Over the sample period of DeSimone and Farrellys study, the arrest

    rate per marijuana user doubled. According to their model estimates, if no other

    independent variables changed, demand should have decreased by 3%. Reality was quite

    the contrary. According to the data, use increased with juveniles displaying the greatest

    increase of 13.5%. From this, DeSimone and Farrelly concluded that Clearly, factors

    other than prices or arrests are important in determining changes in drug use across

    cohorts. (DeSimone and Farrelly 2003).

    Harvard professor Jeffrey A. Miron claimed in his report The Budgetary

    Implications of Marijuana Prohibition that the quantity demand for marijuana after

    legalization would largely be determined by price.

    Therefore: if the price decline under legalization is minimal, then expenditure

    will not change regardless of the demand elasticity. If the price decline is

    noticeable but the demand elasticity is greater than or equal to 1.0 in absolute

    value, then expenditure will remain constant or increase. If the price decline is

    noticeable and the demand elasticity is less than one, then expenditure will

    decline. Since the decline in price is unlikely to exceed 50% and the demand

    elasticity is likely at least -0.5, the plausible decline in expenditure is

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    approximately 25%. Given the estimate of $10.5 billion in expenditure on

    marijuana under current prohibition, this implies expenditure under legalization of

    about $7.9 billion.

    Saffer and Chaloupka (2009) quantified the change in consumption from

    legalization, finding that Marijuana decriminalization was found to increase the

    probability of marijuana participation by about 8%. They proceeded to support their

    findings with the support of their peers; The few prior studies of the effect of

    decriminalization on marijuana use generally find that marijuana decriminalization has no

    effect on participation. Pacula (2004), Thies and Register (2003), Dinardo and Lemieux

    (1992), and Johnston, OMalley, and Bachman (1991) all used samples of young people

    and found no effect of marijuana decriminalization. They did however reference one

    study by Model, which concluded that decriminalization increases marijuana use. The

    National Academy of Sciences (1999) undertook a study of many aspects of the

    marijuana question, including the effects of legalization. The Academy analyzed

    numerous studies and concluded that, there is little evidence that decriminalization of

    marijuana use necessarily leads to a substantial increase in marijuana.

    The US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) disagrees with the

    aforementioned studies by claiming that the use of marijuana would greatly increase if

    decriminalized. To support this claim they reference the history of the state of Alaska. In

    1975, the Alaskan Supreme Court ruled to decriminalize personal consumption and

    possession of marijuana. The ruling allowed adults over the age of 18 to possess up to

    four ounces of marijuana in their homes and up to one ounce of marijuana in public. The

    ruling also allowed for citizens to have up to 25 marijuana plants in the home. The DEA

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    reported that this resulted in increased usage rates especially among teens, many of which

    were still banned from using the drug. The DEA failed to explain that this is in

    accordance with a national trend. From 1974-1979, teen marijuana use skyrocketed

    nationwide from 27.1% to 36.5%. Increased teen use of marijuana in Alaska during this

    period is better explained by this national trend than the state decriminalizing the drug.

    According to a study done by the University of Alaska, in 1988, teen marijuana use in the

    state was double that of the national average. However, the University of Alaska

    researchers who conducted this study stated that his study should not be used to argue for

    or against legalization because there are so many variables. Northern aboriginal

    communities have always had higher rates of alcohol and drug abuse than the national

    average and during the years of Alaskan decriminalization, alcohol consumption went

    down.

    The 1975 Alaskan Supreme Court ruling became increasingly unpopular. On

    November 6thof 1990 the Alaska Marijuana Criminalization Initiative passed with 54.3%

    of the popular vote, making all marijuana possession in Alaska illegal. Recriminalizing

    marijuana failed to have any effect on usage. In 2003, an Alaskan appeals court again

    deemed four ounces of marijuana legal. In 2006 the Alaskan state legislature passed a

    new bill reducing the legal amount to one ounce. This provides us with a great variation

    of criminalization and decriminalization. In 1995, when all amounts of marijuana was

    illegal, 48.4% of Alaskan students had tried marijuana at least once. In 2003 when four

    ounces was again legal, usage dropped to 47.5%. By 2006 when one ounce was legal,

    usage dropped to 44.7%. Alaska has had high marijuana use rates both before and after

    the Alaskan Supreme Court ruling.

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    From the Alaskan case we can conclude, in accordance with studies conducted

    by Pacula, Thies and Register, Dinardo and Lemieux, and Johnston, OMalley, and

    Bachman that if legalized, long-term marijuana use would remain unchanged or slightly

    increased.

    DETERMINING PRICE AND TAXATION

    Marijuana legalization offers an important advantage over prohibition in that it

    allows for taxation on legal distribution of marijuana. Without taxation, the free market

    price of cannabis is estimated to be extremely low. Therefore, taxation could be

    implemented at extremely high rates, while maintaining the price of the drug at a rate

    competitive to other intoxicants, such as alcohol. Taxation on legalized marijuana would

    both create government revenue as well as provide a less harmful and addictive substitute

    to tobacco and alcohol.

    When analyzing the prospective supply of cannabis, we can reasonably assume

    that it would retail at the price similar to other medicinal herbs since the cost of

    production would be similar. According to the GNC website, ginseng sells for $1.50,

    damiana sells for $2.30, and mullein leaf for $1.85 per ounce. Typically, medicinal herbs

    sell for around $1.25-$2.50 per ounce. Higher quality forms of marijuana can be

    compared to fine teas, which typically cost up to $3 per ounce. After adjusting for

    inflation, this appears to be similar to standard pricing from before cannabis was

    prohibited. Advertisements from medical catalogs of 1929 and 1930 show that marijuana

    sold for $2.50-$5 per pound, or $0.15-$0.31 per ounce. This figure becomes $1.20-$2.40

    per ounce after adjusting for inflation, which is very similar to the current price of many

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    medicinal herbs. This is drastically lower than todays rates of around $200-$300 per

    ounce of low-quality cannabis. It is important to note that different types of cannabis

    maintain different qualities and have different natural prices. Based on the price of

    marijuana when legalized and the current price of similar medicinal herbs, we can

    conclude that the natural price of marijuana if legalized would be about $1.80 per ounce.

    To better comprehend taxation rates, it is useful to convert these prices from per-

    ounce to per-joint, meaning standard dosage or serving. The number of joints in one

    ounce varies based on tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which is the principal psychoactive

    constituent of cannabis, potency in the marijuana. THC potencies range from 2-15%

    based on the quality of the marijuana. The government has a standard dose or joint,

    which is used when the National Institute of Drug Abuse issues marijuana to researchers.

    These joints consist of medium-quality 6% potency leaf rolled into cigarette-sized joints

    of 0.4 grams, yielding a 25-milligram dose of THC. Therefore, as previously discussed,

    one ounce of medium-quality marijuana would cost about $1.80 and produce

    approximately 30 joints. With the absence of taxation, the estimated free-market price of

    marijuana would be $0.06 per joint, an incredibly cheap price compared to todays cost of

    about $7.00 per joint. According to this model, decriminalization of marijuana would

    cut the free market price by a factor of over 100. Marijuana would be a much cheaper

    alternative to other intoxicants that are more harmful and addictive such as alcohol. It

    would be both beneficial and necessary to heavily tax cannabis.

    There are several ways which we can calculate the competitive rate or market

    price of marijuana. One method is to compare it to tobacco cigarettes, which would

    probably sustain similar manufacturing costs or marginal costs. The national average for

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    a pack of cigarettes has rapidly increased in recent years from $3.00 in 2001 to $5.29 in

    2011. Taxes vary widely by state with the highest state tax being New York at $4.35 and

    the lowest being Missouri at $0.17. The average state tax is $1.59 per pack with a

    national tax of $1.01 and additional varying local taxes. Since the average total cost of

    cigarettes is $5.29 and the average state and national tax on cigarettes is $2.60, the

    marginal cost of a pack of cigarettes is approximately $2.69. Assuming local taxes

    average at least $0.09, cigarettes are taxed at an approximate rate of 100%. With a

    marginal cost of $2.60 and twenty cigarettes in each pack, a single cigarette costs about

    $0.13, seven cents higher than my estimate of the natural price of marijuana. Although

    these prices are extremely similar, the difference can likely be explained by the

    difficulties associated with growing tobacco that do not exist with cannabis cultivation.

    Doctor Thomas Glynn, head of the international cancer control section at the American

    Cancer Society, commented on this, There are about 10 million acres worldwide

    devoted to tobacco growth. And tobacco, as any agronomist knows, really depletes the

    soil. It takes a lot of manpower to grow and process it.

    Comparing the costs of tobacco with the cost of marijuana is useful when

    analyzing the natural price but not necessarily the market price. The two drugs have very

    different effects of the user, mainly intoxication. One joint of marijuana is extremely

    more intoxicating than one tobacco cigarette. Therefore, comparing production to

    marijuana is a good determinant of what the free-market price would be, not the

    competitive rate at which it should be sold.

    In terms of intoxication, it is very difficult to evaluate an exact comparison

    between marijuana and the major legal intoxicant, alcohol, since the duration and effects

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    vary with different people. Alcohol is clearly the most similar legal intoxicating drug.

    Despite the existing differences, attempting to compare the two drugs is the most

    effective method to calculate the competitive price for marijuana. A standard

    intoxicating dose of alcohol is about two to four drinks or three 12-ounce beers. The

    intoxication effect of this amount of alcohol is comparable to the intoxication effects of

    one joint although different people will respond in different ways to the two drugs. One

    dose of alcohol costs roughly $1.50-$2.50. Therefore, the market price of an

    intoxicating dose of marijuana is around $2.00. Since we previously determined that

    marijuana has a natural price of $0.06, there is room for heavy taxation to reach the

    market price of $2.00. This per joint price is also the approximate price at which

    marijuana is currently sold in the Netherlands.

    Cannabis in the Netherlands is currently decriminalized, but not legalized. This

    means that the Dutch tolerate possession and sale of up to 30 grams of marijuana in

    coffeehouses, while distribution, large-scale trafficking, and manufacture is illegal and

    punished. The price of marijuana in the Netherlands is very similar to prices for alcohol.

    Coffeehouses sell hashish, low-quality marijuana, for about $2.15 per gram while

    sinsemilla, high-quality marijuana, sells around $8.10. Assuming a gram of hashish

    can yield two joints, and a gram of sinsemilla can yield four joints, this works out to be

    around $1.00 to $2.00 depending on the quality. These prices are not affected by taxes

    since Netherlands does not directly tax marijuana sales (although indirectly through a

    sales tax on coffee shops). Since the Dutch have not experienced a widespread marijuana

    abuse issue, we can assume that this price level is realistic. This is much cheaper than

    my calculated free-market rate of $0.06 per joint. However, this is due to the fact that

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    Dutch prices are inflated by the fact that cannabis remains decriminalized but illegal.

    While Dutch authorities tolerate small-scale domestic producers, international traffickers

    and large-scale domestic distributors are both subject to busts and punishments by Dutch

    authorities. The majority of the profits from marijuana sales in the Netherlands go to

    illicit traffickers. As a result, Dutch consumers pay inflated black market prices for

    marijuana and the Dutch government misses out on potential revenue generated from

    taxation on marijuana.

    Legalizing instead of decriminalizing marijuana is the more effective method to

    create government revenue by taxation. There are several different ways to implement a

    tax on marijuana. In order to gain the greatest national benefit and government revenue,

    we need to determine which taxation method would be most effective.

    One method would be to tax cultivators. This would be a very difficult task since

    small-scale home cultivators can easily grow cannabis. Effective enforcement would be

    nearly impossible. Another idea is to regulate consumers directly by requiring licensing

    for all who intend to buy, consume, or grow marijuana. By charging fees for these

    licenses, government could generate revenue. These user fees can be costly to administer

    since they must be distributed to a very wide population. This would also still require

    difficult enforcement efforts to the unlicensed as sharing from those with licenses would

    be very easy. The ideal tax would be conveniently assessed on licensed manufacturers

    and wholesalers, similar to the federal tax on cigarettes. This kind of tax would be easily

    enforced since there are a relatively small number of distributors. These distributors

    would add the tax, as well as a markup, to increase price to the competitive rate. A

    specific marijuana tax could be effectively implemented with a rate as high as $1.80 per

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    dose. This would drive the price of a marijuana dose to $1.86, which would allow room

    for mark-up and overhead costs while still being made available at a competitive rate.

    This is a very high tax that, while still lower than the tax on tobacco, would generate a

    staggering amount of government revenue.

    One potential problem would be policy towards the previously discussed home-

    growers. Enforcement efforts would be similar to those under prohibition: expensive and

    highly ineffective. Licensing and home-taxes would also be very difficult to implement

    effectively. The most practical solution would be to allow home growers to cultivate

    their own marijuana, free of tax or other regulation just like they would grow tomatoes,

    cucumbers, or beans. This is the method most closely associated with providing citizens

    with freedom and liberty. Clearly, the sale of untaxed home marijuana would be banned.

    Still, home growers would be able to produce marijuana at a much cheaper cost than is

    available via retail due to taxes, overhead, and markup costs. However, evidence shows

    that home growers would not be prevalent to the extent that a marijuana tax would be

    ineffective.

    During the initial decriminalization period (1975-1990) in Alaska, home

    cultivation was the one legal way to get marijuana. Marijuana was still illicitly sold

    however, around $250 per ounce, which is near the national competitive rate of todays

    illicit marijuana. Alaskan marijuana users would rather illegally buy the drug at high

    prices, than grow their own for a fraction of the cost. This provides convincing evidence

    to believe that Americans today would act in a similar matter; buy expensive marijuana

    rather than grow their own. There would be a limit of how highly the government could

    tax marijuana before consumers opt to avoid high prices and cultivate at home. However,

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    as was the case in Alaska, this limit would be significantly higher than the competitive

    rate.

    SOCIAL COST

    The social cost of legalizing marijuana will largely be determined by whether or

    not consumption experiences an increase after the drug has been legalized. As previously

    discussed, most research suggests that such an increase would be minimal or nonexistent.

    If that theory remains true, the social cost of legalizing marijuana would not be drastic

    since consumption remains relatively constant. One problem with analyzing the social

    cost of marijuana legalization is that the affect of marijuana on consumers is still an area

    of debate among researchers. As this thesis focuses mainly on the economic impact of

    legalizing marijuana, I will not spend too much time discussing the physiological and

    mental effects associated with the drug. Overall, the general consensus is that marijuana

    has a deleterious effect on consumers and society, although much less so than alcohol or

    tobacco. The California Research Advisory Panel agreed with this assessment, An

    objective consideration of marijuana shows that it is responsible for less damage to

    society and the individual than are alcohol and cigarettes.

    To effectively categorize types of social costs, I will break them down into two

    categories by the viewpoint of the consumer. First: internal costs and second: external

    costs. Internal costs are issues that have a direct effect on the consumer. External costs

    affect a third non-consuming party, or society as a whole. Examples of external costs

    would include increased insurance costs, accidents affecting third parties, and drug

    related violence and crime. Internal costs include health problems, reduced personal

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    income, and poor achievement. As will be discussed, there often is a thin line between

    external and internal costs since many effects are both internal and external. An example

    of this is lack of motivation and poor school performance caused by marijuana. This is

    an area of concern since the majority of marijuana users are high school and college age

    males. According to a study by the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana

    Laws, one out of four marijuana possession arrests involves people under the age of 18,

    and nearly three-quarters of all pot arrests are for people under the age of 30. Lack of

    motivation and poor school performance is an internal effect given that the laziness effect

    would directly affect the school performance and employment of the marijuana user.

    However, school performance and employment are both societal issues, therefore making

    it also an external effect. If legalized, age and driving restrictions on marijuana use

    would be necessary.

    The first main internal cost from a physiological standpoint would be respiratory

    harm due to smoking. A recent epidemiological study by the Kaiser Permanente Center

    for Health Research found that daily marijuana smokers had a 19% higher rate of

    respiratory complaints than those who do not smoke the drug. While these reparatory

    problems have the potential to raise group insurance rates, this would still be mainly an

    internal cost. Legalizing cannabis would reduce the cost of respiratory damage from

    marijuana consumption by allowing for and encouraging the research and development of

    better filtration technology as well as increasing awareness of marijuana related

    respiratory damage. Increased education of risks would lead to higher use of alternative

    consumption methods, and the development of more potent but less harmful varieties of

    marijuana.

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    Marijuana can also be consumed in ways other than smoking, such as through baked

    goods. These alternative forms of consumption eliminate respiratory problems associated

    with marijuana use.

    Another claimed internal cost is the controversial accusation of marijuana being a

    gateway drug in that it is prone to direct users to consume more dangerous and

    addictive drugs. This theory has shaped prevention efforts and government policy for

    decades. A 12-year study by the University of Pittsburg provides evidence contrary to

    the gateway theory. This study tracked 214 boys beginning at ages 10-12 who all

    eventually used some form of drugs, whether legal or illegal. When the boys reached age

    22, they were classified into one of three groups: those who only used legal drugs

    (alcohol and tobacco), those who started with alcohol and tobacco then moved on to

    marijuana (gateway theory), and those who used marijuana prior to alcohol or tobacco

    (reverse sequence). Nearly a quarter of the study population, 28 boys, exhibited the

    reverse sequence of using marijuana prior to alcohol or tobacco. Those 28 boys were no

    more likely to develop a substance use disorder than those who followed the traditional

    succession the gateway drug theory. The gateway progression may be the most

    common pattern, but its certainly not the only order of drug use, said Ralph E. Tarter,

    Ph.D., professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the University of Pittsburgh and lead

    author of the study. In fact, the reverse pattern is just as accurate for predicting who

    might be at risk for developing a drug dependence disorder.

    The study found that whether a teen follows the gateway theory or the reverse

    gateway scenario is not determined by the characteristics of the drug, but rather by

    environmental aspects. For example, if it is easier for a teen to obtain marijuana than

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    beer, he is more likely to consume marijuana. The study also found several factors other

    than use of a transitional drug that leads to the consumption of more dangerous and

    addictive drugs. These factors include: poor physical neighborhood environment,

    exposure to heavy drugs, lack of parental involvement and interaction, and a general

    inclination for deviance from sanctioned behaviors. The emphasis on the drugs

    themselves, rather than other, more important factors that shape a persons behavior, has

    been detrimental to drug policy and prevention programs. Dr. Tarter said. To become

    more effective in our efforts to fight drug abuse, we should devote more attention to

    interventions that address these issues, particularly to parenting skills that shape the

    childs behavior as well as peer and neighborhood environments. Eliminating marijuana

    to prevent its supposed role as a gateway drug is not an effective or efficient way to

    prevent the use of highly addictive and dangerous drugs.

    A 2007 report by ABC News on marijuana cultivation features comments on

    whether marijuana is a gateway drug by Columbia University neuroscientist Dr. Carl

    Hart:

    Is marijuana a gateway drug? Its a difficult question because I think

    people focus on, you try marijuana youre going to go on to other drugs,

    when the vast majority of the folks who [use] marijuana do not go on to

    other drugs. But certainly, those individuals whove tried cocaine and

    they have tried heroin, most of them have used marijuana. And most of

    them have used alcohol underage, and most of them have smoked tobacco

    as well. So if you think about gateway in that sense, certainly you can

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    say its a gateway. But what is the meaning of gateway when you put it

    together like that?

    There are also social benefits associated with legalizing marijuana. Removal of

    marijuana from the black market is a major social benefit. A report by the National

    Survey of Drug Use and Health found that the nations black market in drugs supports

    more than 4.6 million drug sellers. As report author Gettman noted, while the NSDUH

    data does not disaggregate the data based on the type of drug sold, marijuana is by far the

    most commonly sold drug in America. The NSDUH undercounts actual drug use and

    sales so the figure of 4.6 million marijuana sellers is likely accurate. Of those, 23% or

    about one million, were under the age of 18. The study found most of the teen sales are

    small-time, occasional sellers but 27% sold pot more than 10 times in a year. Even if the

    sales are small-time and occasional, the consequence can be a serious felony marijuana

    distribution bust. The vast majority of these teen sellers go unpunished. However,

    illegally distributing marijuana can have negative psychological effects. The seller will

    become a self-labeled criminal and deviant which, can destroy resolve to be a

    contributing member to society.

    The main external cost associated with marijuana use is an increased risk of

    accident due to mental impairment. According to the Kaiser study referred to previously,

    this is the number one hazard of marijuana use as daily users reported a 30% higher rate

    of injuries than non-users. Since many of these accidents may likely involve a non-

    consuming third party, this could also be counted as an external cost.

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    It is extremely difficult to quantify internal costs. One of the main reasons for

    making a distinction between external and internal costs is to determine the cost that

    marijuana use has on society. Since internal costs primarily affect only the user, it can be

    assumed that the harm will be at their expense. External costs are very difficult to

    quantify but can be done when considering the external costs of alcohol and tobacco.

    Table 1 does this by calculating the cost that marijuana, alcohol, and tobacco have on

    society. The numbers represent the external cost per dose, which also represents the

    estimated harmfulness tax. A study by W. Manning, aimed at determining appropriate

    tax rates on alcohol and tobacco, was the source for the numbers in this table.

    Mannings analysis displays how much of the health cost imposed on the

    insurance system by alcohol and tobacco related causes is counterbalanced by the fact

    that smokers and drinkers typically die younger, therefore reducing pension and

    retirement costs. After compensating for that fact, Manning calculates the health cost of

    cigarettes to be $.36 per pack for diseases and second hand smoke, which is just under

    two pennies per cigarette.

    Net Health Costs for marijuana are only relevant if the drug is smoked and thus

    creates second hand smoke. As previously discussed, there are less harmful ways of

    consuming the drug. Through incentivized taxation, other forms of consumption could

    become the main form of marijuana use, thus eliminating all disease costs of the drug.

    By estimating the equivalency of marijuana and tobacco we can quantify the societal cost

    of smoking marijuana. When the two drugs are compared, the average marijuana smoker

    inhales about four times as much noxious tars as cigarette smokers. The amount of

    second hand smoke created maintains the same ratio. However, the average joint weighs

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    about as much as two cigarettes. Marijuana does not contain nicotine, the most addictive

    substance known to man and the leading factor in tobacco-related heart disease. Second

    hand smoke from tobacco is more harmful than second hand smoke created from

    marijuana. Therefore it seems reasonable to put the disease related external cost of

    marijuana at 2 cents per joint.

    In regards to alcohol, Manning concludes that the Net Health Costs of drinking

    one excess ounce is $.26. He defines an excess ounce to be an ounce in excess of one

    per day(Manning 2003). The major external cost of alcohol is accidents, costing $0.93

    per excess ounce while one average ounce (not in excess) is $0.38. In his analysis,

    Manning includes traffic injuries caused by drunk drivers including non-drinking victims.

    Manning does not consider other alcohol related accidents or alcohol related violence.

    Overall the external cost of alcohol is $1.19 per excess ounce.

    The external cost of alcohol is clearly dominated by accidents. It is unclear how

    to relate these to marijuana. The majority of research conducted on the matter claims that

    marijuana is less of an accident liability than alcohol. Studies of fatal car accidents

    indicate that, at least on the road, marijuana tends to be a secondary risk factor compared

    to alcohol. Marijuana is much less of a risk for violent accidents since marijuana reduces

    violent tendencies, unlike alcohol, which amplifies them. In terms of intoxication, one

    joint is comparable to in-between one ounce and one excess ounce. We can estimate that

    the external cost of marijuana related accidents is $0.60, the cost in between an average

    ounce and an excess ounce of alcohol.

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    Table 1

    External Costs of Drug Use

    Cigarettes (pack of 20)* Alcohol (1 excess oz)* Marijuana

    (1 joint)

    Net Health

    Costs

    $0.15 smoking diseases

    $0.23 passive smoking

    $0.26 $0.02

    smoking

    Accidents $0.93 $0.60

    Total $0.38 $1.19 $0.62

    *Source: Manning et al., "The Taxes of Sin: Do Smokers and Drinkers Pay Their Way?"

    JAMA 261:1604-9.

    Therefore, we can conclude that the total social cost of marijuana is $0.62 per

    joint. Manning would argue that the above formulas should decide the rate of an

    implemented harmfulness tax. However, as previously discussed, taxes should be large

    enough to increase the price of marijuana to the competitive rate. A tax fulfilling that

    objective would be over double the external social cost of marijuana use. It is useful to

    know the determined social cost of $.62 per joint of marijuana when analyzing whether

    or not legalization would benefit society as a whole.

    ENFORCEMENT COST

    According to the International Centre for Prison Studies at Kings College in

    London, the United States leads the world in incarceration of its citizens. This leadership

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    is not by a small margin, and it is both in absolute terms as well as percentage of

    population. The U.S. surpasses the second place contender, the Russian Federation, by

    20%. It leads European industrialized countries by approximately 500%. Extensive

    incarceration is a heavy burden on government budgets at the expense of taxpayers.

    Many factors affect incarcerations, but the war on drugs in America is a leading factor.

    Aggressive policing, combined with mandatory sentencing and the application of drug

    testing to parolees and probationers, has caused a substantial change in the composition

    of the American prison population. It is important to analyze the cost and benefits of

    maintaining such high incarceration rates to determine if this is an effective use of

    taxpayer money.

    For decades, violent criminals made up the majority of inmates. However, in the

    late 1970s we experienced an influx of nonviolent incarcerations. Today, people

    incarcerated for nonviolent crimes maintain the majority. According to a report by the

    Center for Juvenile and Criminal Justice (1999):

    Contrary to the public perception that the incarceration of violent

    offenders has driven Americas prison growth, the Institute found that

    77% of the growth in intake to Americas state and federal prisons

    between 1978 and 1996 was accounted for by nonviolent offenders.

    According to data collected by the United States Justice Department, from

    1978 to 1996, the number of violent offenders entering our nations

    prisons doubled (from 43,733 to 98,672 inmates); the number of

    nonviolent offenders tripled (from 83,721 to 261,796 inmates) and the

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    number of drug offenders increased seven-fold (from 14,241 to 114,071

    inmates). Justice Department surveys show that 52.7% of state prison

    inmates, 73.7% of jail inmates, and 87.6% of federal inmates were

    imprisoned for offenses, which involved neither harm, nor the threat of

    harm, to a victim

    This shift that occurred during the 1970s, has greatly increased the financial

    burden of incarceration. It began a trend that is still prevalent today. The number of

    people in state prisons for drug offenses has increased 550% over the last 20 years

    (Justice Policy Institute 2009). Incarceration is just a fraction of the cost of enforcing

    marijuana criminalization. Court and police costs also cost American taxpayers billions

    of dollars per year. These other costs have continued to rapidly increase similarly to the

    increase in incarceration. The budget for the federal Drug Enforcment Adminitration has

    increased 40-fold since its inception in 1973, from $65 million (and 2,800 employees) to

    $2.6 billion (11,000 employees) in 2009 (Nelson 2010). The common taxpayer has paid

    for this rapid increase in cost.

    A report by Jon Gettman in 2007 reported an estimate of the national criminal

    justice expenditures for enforcing marijuana to be $16.4 billion per year. He reached this

    number by using simple percentage based calculations. Gettman received numbers from

    estimations from an Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) report that found

    Criminal Justice Systems and other Public Costs to be about $36.4 billion, including

    $13.2 billion for state and local corrections facilities, $9.8 billion for law enforcement

    expenses, and $6.2 billion for federal supply reduction activities. Marijuana arrests

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    accounted for 45% of all drug arrests annually. Consequently Gettman concluded that

    $16.4 billion in law enforcement costs were spent on marijuana related cases.

    According to Harvard professor Jeffrey Miron, the $16.4 billion dollar estimate

    by Gettman is fairly accurate, but slightly too high. In the 2010 edition of The Budgetary

    Implications of Drug Prohibition, Miron estimated that legalizing marijuana would save

    $13.7 billion per year in government expenditure on enforcement of prohibition (Miron

    2010). Legalization eliminates arrests for trafficking and possession, Miron says.

    Second, legalization saves judicial and incarceration expenses. Third, legalization

    allows taxation of drug production and sale. In an interview with CNBC, Miron argued

    that increase in enforcement would not be beneficial. I dont think there is any data to

    suggest any payoff for greater enforcement. If you are making lots of arrests then you are

    spending more money-making arrests, lots of prosecutions, etc. In terms of showing that

    differences in enforcement lead to differences in use rates, no, there isnt any evidence to

    support that.

    A report by the Sentencing Project calculated the estimated national criminal

    justice expenditures for enforcing marijuana laws by using a proportionate cost mode.

    This report totaled all of the criminal justice costs and associated them proportionately

    with marijuana related events or persons to estimate the proportion of marijuana related

    expenditures and analyzed them by state. The report concluded that eight states spend

    more than $1 billion taxpayers dollars enforcing marijuana laws. New York spends

    around $3 billion, Texas $2 billion, California and Florida $1.9 billion; and Michigan,

    New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania $1 billion. New York and Texas lead the nation in

    marijuana arrests with more than 57,000 in each state. However, both of these states are

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    towards the lower end of per capita arrests. Conservative heartland states maintained the

    highest per capita arrest ratio with Nebraska having 458 arrests per 100,000 citizens,

    followed by Louisiana (398), Wyoming (386), Kentucky (364) and Illinois (359). The

    national average was 239 marijuana arrests per 100,000 citizens. North Dakota spends

    the least on marijuana enforcement, $45 million a year, reflecting both its location and

    population density.

    A report by the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws

    (NORML) found similar results. The report also concluded that the cost of marijuana

    enforcement in the United States is an average of $10,400 for each pot smoker arrested.

    American taxpayers cover this staggering cost. NORML also claims that marijuana

    arrests over the past two decades have failed to have any impact on marijuana use rates or

    other indicators chosen by drug enforcers to measure success in the war on drugs. The

    study also found arrests to be disproportionately heavy towards the young and non-white.

    NORML refers to current marijuana policies as wholly ineffective at controlling the use

    and sale of marijuana (NORML 2009). As marijuana arrest rates have increased, this

    increase has not been associated with a reduction in marijuana use, reduced marijuana

    availability, a reduction in the number of new marijuana users, reduced treatment

    admissions, reduced emergency room mentions of marijuana, any reduction in marijuana

    potency, or any increases in the price of marijuana.

    NORML also cited racial prejudice as another problem that continues to plague

    marijuana enforcement. Adult blacks constitute 11.9% of annual marijuana users.

    However, they account for 23% of all marijuana possession arrests in the U.S. NORML

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    concluded that marijuana users who are white, over 30 years old, and/or female are

    disproportionately unaffected by marijuana possession arrests.

    As was previously discussed, marijuana is very easily attainable in America.

    Therefore, marijuana enforcement is not only enormously expensive but also highly

    ineffective in preventing the distribution of marijuana. Most research finds the cost of

    enforcing marijuana prohibition to be around $15 billion. In 2007, Jon Gettman

    estimated the cost to be $16.4 billion; while in 2010, Jeffrey Miron estimated the cost to

    be roughly $13.7. The average of their findings would be approximately $15.1 billion as

    the cost of enforcing marijuana prohibition, which will be the figure used in calculating

    the total economic effect of legalizing marijuana.

    CONCLUSION

    In order to calculate concluding figures, we must establish the estimated size of

    the marijuana market. We have already determined marijuana to be a readily available

    drug that nearly half of adults have tried at some point in their life. However, the amount

    that is actually consumed is very difficult to analyze due to differing reports caused by its

    illegal nature. The most recent State Department and NDIC reports provide an estimate

    that in 2006, at least 8,700 mt (metric tons) of marijuana was available for sale in the

    United States (NDIC, 2011). This is a number much lower than estimates by the Library

    of Congress and National Survey data. I previously established the average cost of an

    ounce of illegal marijuana in todays market to average around $250. There are 35,274

    ounces in a metric ton. By multiplying 8,700 with 35,274 we can conclude that there is

    roughly 306,883,800 ounces of marijuana consumed in the United States annually. If

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    each ounce sells at an estimated $250 then the illegal market for marijuana use is

    approximately $76,720,950,000. This large sum of money would be added to American

    Gross Domestic Product; increasing investment and creating thousands of jobs. It should

    be noted that the estimated $77 billion market is at high prices caused by illegality of the

    drug. If legalized, the price of the market would drop.

    A market of nearly $77 billion is fairly similar to tobacco and alcohol markets

    today. According to Standard & Poors industry report, the tobacco and alcohol

    industries generated $263 billion combined in 2008. Alcohol represented $188 billion of

    the total, with $99 billion in beer, $61 billion in spirits, and $27 billion in wine. Tobacco

    generated $75 billion including $71 billion in cigarette sales (Nelson 2010). According

    to research by the Fuji publishing company, the market for tobacco directly creates

    662,402 jobs with a total compensation of $15,161,772,035. If legalized, a cannabis

    industry that is currently nearly $77 billion would also create thousands of jobs. As

    marijuana is grown, packaged, and transported from the field to the consumer it would

    create jobs in growing, cutting, processing, distribution, and sales. These jobs would

    create legal, taxable employment as opposed to the criminal black market that it currently

    funds.

    Closely associated with the current marijuana black market is illegal immigration.

    According to the Federation for American Immigration Reform, there were 72,000

    criminal aliens in federal custody at the end of 2007 solely because of drug charges. By

    making marijuana possession legal and increasing the legal manufacture of the drug in

    the United States, there would be less demand for the drug from Mexico and South

    America. With fewer drugs crossing the border, the number of immigrants who transport

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    drugs in exchange for a cash infusion to help them with the crossing would drop in turn.

    A reduction in the number of illegal crossings would also result in the reduction of the

    need for taxpayer provided resources by immigration and border control agencies.

    If taxed at the proposed $1.80 per joint, government would see revenues of $54.00

    per ounce. With an estimated market of 306,883,800 ounces, total government revenue

    from cannabis taxation would be $16,571,725,200. $16.5 billion is a staggering figure

    that would greatly help to reduce government deficit. In addition to the generated tax

    revenue, the government would also save an estimated $15.1 billion annually on

    marijuana enforcement costs. When potential tax revenue is added to funds that would

    be saved by reducing enforcement cost, the total increase in government budget from

    legalizing marijuana would be approximately $31,671,725,200. However, as was

    previously discussed, there is also a social cost associated with cannabis legalization.

    Marijuana has an estimated social cost of $.62 per joint. Therefore, the social cost of

    marijuana per ounce is $18.60. When this is multiplied by the 306,883,800 ounces of

    marijuana sold in America every year, we can assume that the national total social cost of

    marijuana is $5,708,038,680. When the social costs are subtracted from the total

    increase we reach the final total effect that legalizing marijuana would have on

    government budget to be $25,963,686,520.

    Marijuana legalization is not a magical solution to the current drug problems

    facing America today; nor is it the complete solution to the economic and budgetary

    problems that our nation faces. However, it could drastically reduce the annual deficit in

    government budget by nearly $26 billion. In a time of economic recession such

    legislation should be seriously considered.

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    Nelson, A. (2010, April 20). Cnbc special report. Retrieved fromhttp://www.cnbc.com/id/36179677/How_Big_Is_The_Marijuana_Market

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    Name of Candidate: David Glauser

    Birth date: April 4, 1988

    Birth place: Salt Lake City, Utah

    Address: 2628 Hillside Pines CircleSalt Lake City, UT, 84109