Should Marijuana Be Decriminalized Nationwide?—Posner
With 20 states having now legalized
medical marijuana use, and two (Washington and Colorado) having
legalized recreational use of marijuana, the days of legal prohibition
of use of marijuana for recreational as well as for medical purposes
seem numbered.
The case for prohibiting marijuana was
never strong. It is a mind-altering drug, but no more so than alcohol,
and it is considered less likely to induce violent behavior, and in
general to have less destructive effects on the heavy user, the
“addict.” There is little evidence that it is a “gateway” drug, in the
sense that use of it induces the user to “progress” to more harmful
drugs, such as cocaine, methamphetamine, Ecstasy, LSD, heroin, or, for
that matter, alcohol; in fact there is evidence that marijuana is
largely a substitute for alcohol. While prohibition doubtless deters
many young people from using marijuana, it seems unlikely that young
people with strong addictive propensities, for whom consumption of an
addictive drug might be destructive, are deterred. Legalization would
undoubtedly increase the use of marijuana unless very heavy taxes were
imposed (which would in turn give rise to a black market, thus largely
undoing the effects of legalization), but probably not the number of
addicts. Actually, the emergence of a black market would be unlikely
unless very heavy taxes were imposed on the sale of marijuana,
given the natural consumer preference for a legal, FDA-regulated drug
over an illegal one.
Although some 58 percent of Americans
believe that recreational use of marijuana should be made legal, law
enforcement activity aimed at discouraging marijuana use continues at a
high level, with some 750,000 persons being arrested every year on
marijuana charges, almost 90 percent for possession rather than for
production or distribution. Despite the threat of criminal punishment
(though punishment for mere possession, other than possession with
intent to distribute, is largely nominal), the American market for
marijuana is very large—some $36 billion a year (that’s the conservative
estimate: estimates range as high as $113 billion). There is no doubt
that the use of marijuana would increase if it were legalized, because
many people are unwilling to violate criminal laws even if the expected
punishment cost (the gravity of the punishment discounted by the
probability that it will be imposed) is slight. But if the increased use
decreased the use of substitute drugs (including alcohol), there might
well be no net increase in the use of mind-altering drugs. Furthermore,
legalization would undoubtedly be accompanied by the imposition of sales
taxes comparable to those for cigarettes and alcohol (indeed the desire
for tax revenue was apparently a major factor in Colorado’s decision to
decriminalize marijuana), which would both generate needed tax revenues
and limit the increase in use. Suppose marijuana were legalized and a
33 percent sales tax imposed. And suppose total sales remained at $36
billion because the effect of the higher price resulting from the sales
tax was offset by greater demand for the drug and by the efficiencies in
production and distribution that would be obtained making it a legal
product. Then the sales tax would generate $12 billion in annual tax
revenues. Along with tax revenues would come the further benefit to
government finances of eliminating an estimated $7.6 billion in annual
police and prison costs of marijuana prosecutions and convictions.
Although my analysis strongly suggests
that there would be net benefits from decriminalizing the sale of
marijuana throughout the United States, it does not follow that enacting
a federal law that would do that would be a good idea—not only because
opposition to legalization remains strong in a number of states, but
also because the steps that the liberalizing states have already
taken—20 to legalize medical use of marijuana and 2 of them to legalize
recreational use as well—are likely to make enforcement of marijuana
laws in other states ineffectual. In all 20 states there will be
increased availability of marijuana, production will be cheaper because
it will be done openly, and it will be difficult to prevent exportation
to the prohibitionist states, overwhelming law enforcement resources in
those states. The death knell of prohibition would be a decision by the
Department of Justice to reduce prosecution of producers and
distributors of marijuana, because federal criminal penalties of drug
crimes are far more severe than state penalties and so have greater
deterrent effect, though neither deterrence nor incapacitation seems to
have much effect on the supply of illegal drugs, since the elasticity of
supply of drug dealers is very high. Dealers make good incomes relative
to alternative employment opportunities and expected punishment costs
are low.
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