This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Tuesday, 20 September 2016
How medical marijuana transformed stoner culture into big business in the US
Investors, retailers, farmers and even delivery start-ups are cashing in on America's profitable new industry.
By Lydia Smith
Medical marijuana is big business in the United StatesJustin Sullivan/Getty Images
Marijuana
has come a long way. In just a few years, the drug has gone from being
banned across the US to being legalised not only for medical use, but
recreational purposes too.
In 1996, California voters approved
Proposition 215 – the first legislation legalising marijuana for
medicinal purposes at state level. Since then, 25 US states have relaxed
laws on medical cannabis use, with several – Alaska, Colorado, Oregon,
Washington and the District of Columbia – allowing recreational use.
The opening of the medical marijuana industry
in the States has led to a booming business, with investors, retailers
and even delivery start-ups cashing in on the profitable new industry. A
report released in February 2016 by ArcView Market Research found legal
cannabis sales jumped 17% to $5.4bn (£4.2bn) in 2015 – and they are
expected to grow by 25% to reach $6.7bn in total US sales this year.
All sorts of marijuana businesses
are turning a profit in the States. It's a long way from homemade bongs
in dusty basements and plastic baggies – technology is now a major
player in the cannabis industry.
In 2014, a tech entrepreneur called Keith McCarty set up a marijuana delivery service in San Francisco called Eaze.
Two
years later, it has more than 200,000 members who use the platform to
access marijuana from dispensaries on demand. It is effectively Uber for
cannabis, and with the click of a button, Eaze users have access to
legal, medical marijuana in around 20 minutes or less.
"I find the
intersection of cannabis and technology incredibly interesting and
where I saw the biggest opportunity," McCarty says. "Bringing technology
to the industry is a necessity for the industry to responsibly get to
where it needs to be."
After McCarty sold his company Yammer – a
social networking service – to Microsoft in 2012, he wanted to take
"on-demand technologies" into a growing new sector. He settled on
medical marijuana, to make the experience of accessing the drug "faster,
safer and more convenient" for patients.
Most importantly, even
though it is one of the fastest growing industries in the world, the
industry is still in its infancy. "This leaves room for industry
leadership and companies like Eaze to be uniquely positioned to define
and shape its future," McCarty says. Daniele Palumbo/IBTMoreover,
the medical marijuana industry has given the US economy a boost,
McCarty adds. "We look at any existing markets which may have started
smaller – or medicinal – and have opened up – and you see countless jobs
coming out of those markets and enabling people to positively and
legally contribute to the economy," he says.
"Aside from that, a
regulated model where we see tax revenues flowing back into the economy
further benefits local and national communities."
California,
which is already the world's largest legal market for marijuana, has an
even brighter future in the US cannabis industry. In November, the state
will vote on whether to legalise recreational marijuana – which, if
approved, will allow adults ages 21 and over to possess, transport and
use up to an ounce of cannabis.
There are some setbacks in the
industry, however. Although money made from medical marijuana firms is
legal revenuem many US banks are not accepting the cash. Only 220 banks
and credit unions of the more than 7,600 in the US accept cash from
cannabis businesses, Bloomberg reported last October.
This makes
paying taxes difficult and it means cannabis companies are not eligible
for the same tax deductions as other small businesses. And with so many
cash-in-hand transactions, companies risk being targets for crimes such
as burglaries.
This is not stopping the industry from developing,
however. As well as cultivation, dispensaries and delivery services, the
cannabis industry is also taking inspiration from social media giants
to connect communities of users and patients. Although medical marijuana
is not legal across the US – in part, over fears of crime rates and
addiction – the stigma of the drug is gradually being eroded by making
marijuana mainstream.
Isaac Dietrich is the co-founder and CEO at MassRoots, one of the largest and fastest-growing social platforms for cannabis users.
"We
started MassRoots in 2013 to give cannabis consumers a place to connect
with like-minded people, recommend the best products and express
themselves in a stigma-free environment," Dietrich says.
People
use the app and website to share their cannabis content, stay connected
with medical marijuana news and follow their favourite dispensaries. It
now has 900,000 users – and Dietrich says he expects to reach one
million soon. At the moment, they are focusing on product reviews, so
users can find the best products for whatever condition they are
treating.
"It [the medical cannabis industry] has created tens of
thousands of jobs across the United States, contributed hundreds of
millions of dollars in tax revenues, and is helping to end the unjust
War on Drugs," Dietrich says.
"Over the past three years,
MassRoots has raised over $7m, facilitated hundreds of millions of
user-to-user interactions, and changed App Store policies at the largest
corporation in the world. And we're just getting started," Dietrich
says. "We expect MassRoots to be at the forefront of all major policy
changes and expansion occurring in the regulated cannabis industry."
And
according to Dietrich, the industry will continue to grow if other
states – particularly on the East Coast – allow access to medical
marijuana too. "We believe at least five states with close to 30% of the
United States population will vote to regulate the production and sale
of cannabis this year, accelerating the growth of the industry and hopefully forcing action at the federal level."
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