Title: Drug Policy is Deja Vu All Over Again
1Drug Policy is Deja Vu All Over Again
- Stephen T. Easton
- Simon Fraser University
- and
- The Fraser Institute
2To set the stage for todays discussion
- We need to go back a little to see how future
history will treat us by remembering the last
prohibition
3Remember the Last Great Prohibition
- Canada prohibited the consumption of alcohol from
1917 to 1922 (more or less) - The United States prohibited the consumption of
alcohol from 1918 to 1932
4The Consequences
- As an enduring testament to futility,
- Recall that the Untouchables is still running
on TV.
5History anyone?
- There they are, deeply committed to fighting what
is now a legal and respectable line of work
brewing and distributing alcohol. - So, sip your Chardonnay, have a brew, or mix a
retro martini and applaud Elliot Ness and the
Untouchables as he fights your kind of crime.
6A Message to Current History
- We cannot prevent people from consuming illegal
substances that they want - It is a war that was lost in the 1920s and 1930s
and is being lost again - Lets take a look at the facts
7Lifetime Numbers
8Current Users
9Business is about Resource Allocation
- What do we do in a business oriented approach?
10Business is about Resource Allocation
- We look at the harm inflicted.
- We look at the difficulty of enforcement
- We reallocate resources so that they reflect the
observation that an additional unit of effort
yield the same payoff in each activity to which
we are committed
11Business is about Resource Allocation
- We spend too much time and money on vainly trying
to control the uncontrollable -- Elliott Ness and
you. - We spend too little time in preventing, educating
and remedying those who are in misery with drugs.
- Incidentally, our policy makes available large
sums of money to people who violate the law.
12So Is Drug Control Really about the Harm they do?
- Lets ask about what is currently legal
- Tobacco and
- Alcohol
1327 of the Canadian Population Currently Smoke
(Tobacco)
1472 of Canadians Use this Formerly Prohibited
Substance
15What is the Putative Effect of Behaviours such
as Smoking and Drinking?
16What is the message?
- Clearly, the harm the substance may do is not the
criterion by which we determine illegality. - Even with the poignant story over the weekend,
nobody is suggesting banning cars that can drive
fast simply because some do drive fast.
17The futility of trying to stop drugs from the
production end
- Let us take the most obvious example of drug
production that absorbs police energy - Marijuana Production
- It is profitable
- It is easy.
18Some Costs of Production
19So Why Do It?
- Cost 100,000
- Value of Crop 50,000
- 3 Crops a Year!
- Value of 150,000 on a Cost of 100,000.
- A very good return on capital even with these
very, very conservative assumptions
20There is lots of money in marijuana, not to
mention the other drugs
- Marijuana alone probably nets at least 700
million into producers pockets -- just in
Vancouver.
21Drug W and Charges Canada and British Columbia,
1998
22What does the pattern mean?
- In BC marijuana possession is in some sort of
legal limbo. - How the Courts proceed is anyones guess
- It is not just we, the general public who are
confused about crime and punishment
23So is our money well spent?
- It is pretty clear that enforcement in the case
of marijuana (and most other drugs) has not
limited their accessibility -- just ask at any
local high school, not only at Hastings and Main. - Many producers use drug money for other
undesirable ends (just like Al Capone)
24What if we legalize drugs?
- We will end the supply of money to people who use
it for bad ends. - More people will do them. Yes, but we can
treat/educate in the open. - Just imagine if alcohol was still illegal.
Replay Hastings and Main multiplied by a factor
of 70!
25Conclusion
- We have a problem. We have been trying to
interdict the supply and punish users and
suppliers. - Prohibition does not seem to work and is very
costly -- as detailed by others here. - The costs of the alternative, if alcohol
prohibition is a model, are worth considering.
26Oh yes, as an economist
- If it is legal, we get to measure it, tax it, and
regulate it, something we simply cannot do when
it is illegal.