July 19, 2010 8:18 AM

Study: Marijuana Prices to Crater If Legalized

By
CBSNews
(AP)  A ballot measure to legalize marijuana in California would so upend supply and demand that pot prices could plummet by as much as 90 percent and possibly undercut the tax windfall that supporters have touted to sell the initative, a study published Wednesday found.

The study by the nonpartisan RAND Drug Policy Research Center forecasts some interesting scenarios if California in November becomes the second state, after Alaska, to legalize pot for recreational use by adults and the first to tax commercial cannabis sales.

Pot prices could drop from $375 an ounce under the state's current medical marijuana law to as little as $38 per ounce before taxes as legal pot suddenly becomes available to the public, RAND researhers concluded.

"Right now, when individuals purchase drugs, they are paying for the drug dealer taking risks of being arrested," said Beau Kilmer, the center's co-director and the report's lead author.

The exact amount of revenue legalized pot would bring California is still up in the air. The ballot initiative authorizes counties to license and tax commercial pot sales to adults, leaving it up to local jurisdictions to decide what kind of tax rates to apply to marijuana.

Special Report: Marijuana Nation

The researchers said legalization could bring substantially more revenue if California sees an influx of "marijuana tourism" similar to Amsterdam, where pot is legally sold at coffee shops, and if out-of-state dealers purchase California cannabis to sell back home.

"You would certainly guess that if it's cheaper to produce it in California legally than to import it from Mexico, it would reduce imports from Mexico," Jonathan Caulkins, a Carnegie Mellon University who also worked on the study, said. "Presumably, it would decrease them a lot."

Yet intervention from the federal government, which classifies marijuana as an illegal drug, or regulations limiting marijuana sales to California residents, as is the case now with medical marijuana, easily could defeat dreams of tourists flocking to the coast on pot vacations, Caulkins noted.

RAND analyzed existing research on marijuana prices, cigarette taxes and current pot consumption and applied modeling techniques to determine possible outcomes if pot were to be legalized.

The California Board of Equalization studied the financial impacts of pot while evaluating a bill introduced in the Legislature last year that would have taxed and regulated marijuana like alcohol. Sales taxes and a $50 per ounce excise tax on commercial pot sales would generate $1.4 billion for the state, according to that study.

But that estimate could prove overly optimistic, depending on how pot users and sellers respond to the idea of paying hefty taxes on a weed that can be grown at home, the RAND anaylsis said.

Consumer prices for pot would rise to about $91 an ounce if local governments adopt that same $50 an ounce tax scheme following passage of the ballot measure - still substantially lower than what Californians pay now but high enough to create incentives for growers to sell the drug under the table to avoid paying the government duty.

"When the purchase price goes way down, that cuts down on sales tax revenue, which was $400 million of the $1.4 billion (estimate)," Caulkins said. "What could adversely affect the excise tax is the gray market" that could be created by tax evaders.

Another difficulty the researchers said they faced in trying to tally the economic benefits of marijuana legalization is not knowing how many local governments, if any, would decide to license and tax marijuana sales and if they do, at what rate.

The RAND team was more certain that legalizing adult use of marijuana would cause pot consumption to go up in California, although they said they could not say by how much. Under one model they used, it would grow by about half and under another it would double, reaching rates last seen in the late 1970s.

"We have to realize that marijuana legalization in California would not be a marginal change, it would be a large change," Kilmer said.

The researchers did not try to draw any conclusions about whether legalizing marijuana was good public policy and instead hoped their findings would make voters question "any estimates of revenues and consumption that claim precision," Kilmer said.

RAND, a nonprofit think tank headquartered in Santa Monica, Calif., paid for the research to educate voters ahead of the election, he said.

Rosalie Liccardo Pacula, who co-directs the RAND Drug Policy Research Center, acknowledged that as a California voter, she was uncomfortable with "the lack of specificity" in both the ballot measure and the bill that would have put pot in the same regulatory category as alcohol.

"Neither was sufficient for us to get an idea of what the effect of this was, and as a voter that was disturbing to me," she said.

Dale Gieringer, president of the California chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said legalization advocates have long expected marijuana prices to go down and pot use to go up if criminal penalties were removed.

"Overall, this report casts more smoke than light on the issue , but that is in the nature of any academic study where so many basic facts remain in dispute," Gieringer said. "The most important lesson to be taken away is that the benefits of legalization depend strongly on how it is implemented.

Some veteran growers in far northern California oppose legalization, fearing it would increase competition and cut profits, while others are embracing it as a way to legitimize their line of work.

"I think it will get a big vote up here," said Dan Hamburg, a former Mendocino County congressman and medical marijuana advocate who has endorsed Proposition 19. "Even though you would think all the growers will be against it, I don't think the smarter ones look at it that way. They realize the marijuana-growing counties have a lot to benefit from being legal ... because people up here have been doing it for 40 years."

AP
Add a Comment See all 71 Comments
by lzrdsgal October 26, 2010 11:07 AM EDT
Lends a whole new look to Disneylands "happiest place on earth" ;) LOL
Reply to this comment
by theunique1 August 6, 2010 7:08 PM EDT
They just need to put a 10% tax on weed or something like that. A $50 straight tax per ounce is too high. I've been to Mexico and an ounce can be bought for $20, so if the price is too high in the U.S., drug cartels will still be in business. The reason pot should be legal is a moral one: every person has the right to take into his/her body as they wish as long as they don't hurt others. The economic benefits of legalization are just secondary to this. So, it really shouldn't matter if the state is going to make the money they thought, that shouldn't be the primary reason to legalize.
Reply to this comment
by Noval53 August 4, 2010 4:59 AM EDT
So what if prices collapse; that's good. That means less money goes into the blood drenched drug market place that pot heads pay for. All the billions spent on illegal drugs, buys guns from anywhere and spills blood everywhere. We should go ahead a legalize marijuana so that jobs can be created, quality control a manufacturing can take place, and we take money away from the slime that now profit from it.
Reply to this comment
by tauleonardo July 23, 2010 9:07 AM EDT
It is interesting that the opponents of CA Prop. 19 call themselves "Public safety first". And this is when it has been conclusively shown by experts that Cannabis use suppresses violent behavior (as opposed to alcohol), and that Cannabis can even be potentially useful in addiction treatment, that is in helping people stay off booze and dangerous hard drugs or prescription drugs. Mexican drug cartels also oppose Legalization because if Cannabis is legalized all their illegal distribution networks are no longer needed. Recent scientific Conference in LA also stressed that current situation is unacceptable and unsustainable, and that it is supported by "prison-industrial complex" in this country because those are the people who benefit financially from more prisons and more prisoners. The so-called "public safety first" campaign against Proposition 19 is simply not entitled to use this name for their lies and distortions, because if we talk about "public safety", it is the supporters of Prop. 19 and not its opponents who really care about it. Public safety will be much better served if the Proposition passes, rather than if it fails!
Reply to this comment
by msjb1 July 20, 2010 10:44 PM EDT
can't you just see the plants all growing all around the state capital grounds now nancy polosi will be proud. she will be known as the mother of weed.
Reply to this comment
by lemmer_hanigan July 18, 2010 4:55 AM EDT
For anyone who doesn't know.. there is legal bud you can buy online, check it out at this link ******/legal_bud_usa
Reply to this comment
by gutter628 July 11, 2010 1:55 AM EDT
I love how many republicans are against legalization. I thought that republicans supposedly are against government intervention of freedom. How they want small government. How they are supposedly trying to follow the constitution. can someone tell me where in the constitution the government power to criminalize it is? isn't the constitution actually written on hemp paper?
Reply to this comment
by AttentionDeficit July 19, 2010 4:45 AM EDT
mecanik: prohibit alcohol and then come back and talk to us about this
by gruven13777 July 10, 2010 2:25 AM EDT
Along with making you smarter, inhaling mass quantities of carbon-monoxide from any kind of burning plant material for two or three decades makes your lungs really clean and strong along. If you don't believe me, just ask anyone who is doing it and they will tell you it's true.
Reply to this comment
by hionareef July 12, 2010 6:14 PM EDT
Homework time! Who can tell me what a vaporizer does?
by JayAdler1 July 9, 2010 11:54 PM EDT
California today is one of our worst performing states economically in the Union. There are also social problems and crime statistics that has caused the once Nirvana to evolve into a place we no longer consider Golden. If California now legalizes what in some cases is a dangerous drug and makes the stimulant available to the segment of the population that are already mentally disturbed or criminally inclined the consequences will be horrific. Look, I am 3000 miles away and I assure you something like that will never pass muster here. How is the State of California gong to prevent people from blowing their brains out and then driving. Now they might have dope, booze or both to send them out on the road. A joint can be cut with mescaline or other drugs if someone wants to get even and then it is State Hospital time which also may be the destiny of some people who just cannot withstand the drug.Just like acid in the 1960's there were young people who flipped out on marijuana engaging in light or heavy use. With all the troubles that California has including the rampant unemployment that affect the entire nation, this certainly is not the time to drive citizens into decadence.
Reply to this comment
by hionareef July 12, 2010 6:28 PM EDT
So no one besides you has any self control. You must be a real boyscout.

Just who is it, besides these freakin hypocrites, are all-of-a-sudden going to start smoking pot and drive around wrecklessly? People who smoke will smoke, and people who don't wont. Who even thought up lacing joints with mescaline? Where do you even get mescaline?
by redundantplankton July 9, 2010 8:36 PM EDT
prices would crater and the mexican cartels would run out of ammunition money for the war in mexico. win the drug war by legalizing pot. why not.
Reply to this comment
See all 71 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook