Tax policy on legal pot sales must squeeze out criminal competition: Don Pittis - Action News
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BusinessAnalysis

Tax policy on legal pot sales must squeeze out criminal competition: Don Pittis

Don't count on that cannabis revenue yet. Experts who study the market say the first job for governments is to control the market.

For legal sellers to corner the marijuana market, revenue collection needs to take a back seat

Illegal drug sales amount to billions of dollars a year in Canada. Government tax levels for legal marijuana sales could initially be set low enough to squeeze the profit out of illegal competition. (RCMP)

As the legalization of recreational cannabis approaches,there have already been suggestions on how to spend all that juicy revenue from its taxation.

But experts who study the market say hold on the first job for governments is to control the market.

Governments are johnny-come-lateliesto an existing recreational potbusiness worth billions of dollars a yearaccording to a report last year fromCIBCchief economist Avery Shenfeld. Exactly how many billions is tough to calculate, because criminalsdon't publish annual reports.

Astudy fromthe International Journal of DrugPolicy puttheexisting size of the business in Canada at about $3 billion a year. But extrapolating from post-legalization Colorado suggests the Canadian dollar figure for pot sales could be nearer to $10 billion.

Established competitors

Whatever the existing market'ssize, the newlegal sale of recreational cannabis will be going up against anestablished anddiversified empire, with distribution chains reaching deep into Canadian life, despite the fortune spent on policing.

Tax revenue from legal pot sales in U.S. states has exceeded expectations. (Steve Dipaola/Reuters)

"At the present time there is little evidence that the prohibition on production and consumption is successful in making it unavailable," says the Fraser Institute's Stephen Easton. "For those of you who doubt, ask a child whether he or she knows someone in school from whom they could get marijuana."

If the FraserInstituteisright, that's a business with undeniablygood market penetration.

Edge in quality control

That doesn't mean the legal industry won't have some advantages.

Quality control is one.Legal suppliers won't be able to get away with selling even the least experienced buyer a baggy oforegano.

Legal marijuana isless likely to be adulterated with other drugs or chemicals. Buyers will find it easier to predict thequality and intensity of the drug's effect.

Rather than handing over cash in a darkened bar, recreational smokers will be able pay with theirdebit cards. They will be ableto buy a variety of edibles made to consumer quality standards with known potency.

Edible marijuana treats such as these gummy worms may give legal suppliers an advantage over traditional legal sellers of raw cannabis. (Greentree Kitchener/Instagram)

But this week, Rosalie Wyonch, policy analyst with the C.D. Howe Institute had a warning for governments hoping to earn revenue from legalized pot.

"If the government taxes marijuana heavily," writes Wyonch in an open letter to Bill Blair, one of the keyfederal members in charge of hammering out Canada's new drug policy, "it will ensure the continuation of the black market and will be undermining its efforts to control the substance."

High price, low market share

Wyonchsays charging too much tax on legal weed will leave the business in criminalhands.

According to her estimates, as taxes rise from zero to 65 per cent of the product price, the market share of legal cannabis products will fall from nearly 100 per cent toaround20 per cent.

There are several reasons why that matters.

While the popular discussion of government revenuefrom pot have focused on the government markupsimilar to the tax on wine andspirits, that is only one tax advantage of a legalized industry.

The more parts of the pot production chain that move into the legal sector, the more revenue will pour into the coffersof all levels of government.

Respectable taxpayers

Unlike illicitproducers and sellers, lawful companies pay business taxes. Their employees get T4s and contribute to national pension plans. Unlike back-alley dealers, retail storefronts pay municipal taxes that help to cover the costs ofroads, street lights and police.

Not only that, but wiping out the illegal cannabis sector will eventually reduce the amount of money spentby the justice system catching, convicting and incarcerating people in the illicit trade. The smaller the illicit trade, the greater the savings.

Prices are listed at a Toronto Cannabis Culture location earlier this year. (CBC)

As any business trying to beatthe competition will tell you, it isn't necessary to take away all the opponents' business, just enough to rob them of their economies of scale.

To take control of the market, governments might be wise to begin by usingthe power of the monopoly trader in a way that would contravene competition rules ifattemptedby a commercial company that is, to enter the market with under-pricedproduct.

At the same time, governments can keep the costs of illegal business highby continuing to spend on police enforcement.

Such a competitive strategy needn't last forever, just long enough to corner the market and bankrupt the competition.

Examples from the end of Prohibition are a reminder of how it could work. After everyone got used to good-quality legal booze at reasonable prices, crackdowns on bathtub gin and moonshiners faded into history.

Oncelegal pot has cornered the market, that's when governments can start to raise the sin taxes on cannabis, just as they regularly doon booze and smokes.

And figuring out how to spend the revenue? That's the easy part.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

More analysis by Don Pittis