As marijuana production has ramped up in California, Colorado and Washington, marijuana prices have fallen, especially at the bulk level.
Christopher Ingraham
Marijuana plants grows in backyard in Honolulu, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Marina Riker)
Legal marijuana may be doing at least one
thing that a decades-long drug war couldn’t: taking a bite out of
Mexican drug cartels’ profits.
The
latest data from the U.S. Border Patrol shows that last year marijuana
seizures along the southwest border tumbled to their lowest level in at
least a decade.
Agents snagged roughly 1.5 million pounds of marijuana at the border, down from a peak of nearly 4 million pounds in 2009.
The data supports the many stories
about the difficulties marijuana growers in Mexico face in light of
increased competition from the north.
As
domestic marijuana production has ramped up in places such as
California, Colorado and Washington, marijuana prices have fallen,
especially at the bulk level.
“Two
or three years ago, a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of marijuana was worth $60
to $90,” a Mexican marijuana grower told NPR news in December 2014. “But
now they’re paying us $30 to $40 a kilo. It’s a big difference. If the
U.S. continues to legalize pot, they’ll run us into the ground.”
And it’s not just price — Mexican growers are facing pressure on quality, too.
“The
quality of marijuana produced in Mexico and the Caribbean is thought to
be inferior to the marijuana produced domestically in the United
States, or in Canada,” the DEA wrote last year in its 2015 National Drug
Threat Assessment. “Law enforcement reporting indicates that Mexican
cartels are attempting to produce higher-quality marijuana to keep up
with U.S. demand.”
If the
decline in border seizures is any indication, however, it appears
Mexican growers are having difficulty competing with domestic
production. Some federal authorities are beginning to believe this is
the case.
Noting the decline in
border seizures, Michael Botticelli, director of the Office of National
Drug Control Policy, told a Senate committee last year that “given the
increase in marijuana use among the American population, this suggests
that people using marijuana in the United States may be increasingly
obtaining marijuana from domestic sources.”
Experts caution, however, the
recreational marijuana market in places, such as Colorado and
Washington, is likely having a smaller impact than the much larger and
older medical marijuana market in many states, primarily California.
“Those
trying to understand what has happened with U.S. cannabis consumption
and imports over the past decade need to pay close attention to licensed
and unlicensed production in medical states, especially California,”
Beau Kilmer of the RAND Corporation said in an email.
California
remains the country’s leader in the illicit production of marijuana, as
well as marijuana grown legally under the state’s medical marijuana
regime. A good barometer of this is the DEA’s data on marijuana
eradication, which indicates where law enforcement officers discover and
destroy marijuana crops.
In
2014, California accounted for more than 60 percent of all marijuana
plants seized in the United States. Given those numbers, “it’s still too
soon for production in Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska to be a
bigger story than California,” said Jonathan Caulkins, a Carnegie-Mellon
drug policy expert, in an email.
Still,
there’s no question that drug production south of the border is
changing. The DEA has even found evidence the flow of illegal marijuana
is starting to reverse, with some cases of pot being smuggled into
Mexico.
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