There has been much discussion
surrounding the United States, within the past few years, about the
legalization of marijuana. As a young adult who is considered a frequent
smoker, it was very easy for me to jump on the bandwagon to legalize marijuana.
It is a recreational activity-that I would love to enjoy partaking in-without
worries. My worries mainly consist of getting arrested trying to purchase it or
getting ticketed by the police for smoking it. However, as I’ve looked more
in-depth at states that have legalized the use of marijuana (such as Colorado),
I began to uncover the economic truths behind the legalization of this drug. It
is important for my age demographic to take a moment and to reconsider
legalizing marijuana throughout the whole country based on economic
regulations.
In
the state of Massachusetts, according to the Washington Post, says that 25.7
percent of marijuana users are in the age group from 18 to 25 years-a little
more than a quarter of all who smoke in this state. I am a 22-year-old college
student and a part-time worker. Along with many people my age, my life comes with
a budget. I have school loans, tuition, car payments and repairs, rent, bills,
and, of course, marijuana to pay for; let alone the numerous other expenditures
that cost money. As I stated earlier, I am considered a frequent smoker. I am
smoking at least an eighth of an ounce every week and that amount of usage
costs from 40 to 45 dollars per given week. This would not be the case if
marijuana were legalized. In the state of Colorado, where marijuana is legal, the
average consumer price is $47.50 for an eighth of an ounce. That doesn’t seem
so bad, until I looked further into the pricing. I realized that the price is
missing something that your local drug dealer would never ask for: taxes.
The state of
Colorado implies an excise tax, a sales tax, and a city tax on all marijuana
purchases. According to the Colorado Pot Guide, if one were to buy an eighth of
an ounce from a dispensary in Denver, he or she would pay the base sale price
of the eighth ($47.50), plus a 15% excise tax (for the transfer or marijuana
from growers to retailers), a 10% state sales tax (over the standard state
sales tax of 2.9% so its really 12.90%), and a 3.5% city sales tax (every city
implements their own tax). If you add all of these taxes together at 28.5% to
the base sale price of $47.50, the final price one would pay for an eighth
would be around $61. That is 20 dollars more than what I pay for decriminalized
marijuana. If marijuana were to be legal across the country, expect every state
to impose tax regulations on the purchase of this product. As a young adult
barley scraping by on a tight budget, I much rather see marijuana stay illegal
for the benefits of saving money.
Ever since the 1960s, the joke among my fellow conservatives has that the best way to reduce drug use is to legalize it, and then tax it out of existence.
ReplyDeleteMore seriously, you would be getting a benefit from the tax surcharge -- FDA approval of purity and quality control.
I'm sorry to hear that you're a young adult barley. But that suggests that you could overcome the high cost of indulging in your drug of choice the same way that home-brew beer makers do -- by growing your own.