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Stocks keep tanking, credit is as structurally sound as Swiss cheese, and our nation pretty much owes 100% of our GDP. State and federal head honchos are starting to seriously consider flipping sofa cushions for the fleeting satisfaction of finding a few lost coins.
No one believes legalizing ganja is going to erase our deficit completely, but at this point, slowing the money hemorrhaging out of our already tapped out arteries might be nice for a change, no?
All moral debating aside, Matador has decided to look at this issue from a numbers standpoint.
$35 billion – The estimated value of total marijuana crops grown in the U.S. each year.
$2.4 billion – The estimated potential tax revenue earned if the U.S. taxed marijuana like all other consumer goods.
$6.2 billion – The estimated potential annual tax revenue earned if the U.S. taxed and regulated marijuana like alcohol.
$11 billion – The estimated cost to U.S. taxpayers for total annual marijuana arrests.
over $100 million – The estimated amount the U.S. government spends each year for the National Drug Control Strategy (of which marijuana is the primary target).
Of course, readers must take these numbers with a grain of salt. Economists can only provide broad estimations for a crop that remains essentially illegal and therefore, difficult to track financially. That being said, since these types of formal studies have been released, over here.
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6 Comments... join the discussion!
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That arrests figure is the most staggering to me. Why are so many of my tax dollars going towards arresting pot smokers?
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I agree, of course, as does Rick Steves. One major problem though. If people smoke pot nothing would get done (which is fine with me as WASP/Puritan workaholism is one of cultural neuroses of the U.S.), but that might mitigate the positive economic impact…
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Do you really think that if it was legalised that there would all of a sudden be more people smoking pot? I don’t. People who like smoking pot and want to smoke pot, smoke pot.
@Jacob B. – I don’t think if weed was legalised that all the people who were involved in busting potheads would be without work. I would think that these law enforcement agencies would be putting their resources into more important things.
Bottom line, and it’s not a new revelation, the adverse affects of alcohol on society outweigh the adverse affects of pot. This would have been interesting to see as a statistic here too…alcohol related violence vs. marijuana related violence. “gang of youths arrested following pot-fueled brawl” – unlikely.
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I was tongue-in-check Carlo, but I do think that more people would smoke (drug testing is common in almost all organizations, unfortunately, although I have always refused on first Amendment grounds) and I have no issues with that at all. Many people are now subject to random tests as well a society (the U.S.) where the worker has no rights and labor unions have largely been either destroyed.
Having said that, taxes on Pot would not be significant if you could “grow your own” at little to no cost–else the State or large entities would again control distribution.
But Pot goes against the American Puritan ethic. Pleasure is bad! And the 60’s revolution has not changed that mindset amongst most Americans — look at the Religious Wrong and other fundamentalist groups who sill reign supreme even as they are likely more perverse than others in their daily lives.
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