By Noah Smith
If only Nixon could go to China, as the saying goes, then maybe only Republicans can legalize weed.
Marijuana
has now been legalized for medical use in many states — only Idaho,
Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota still prohibit use in any form. Nine
states allow recreational marijuana use, and 13 others have
decriminalized recreational use to some extent. Meanwhile, public
support for legalizing the drug continues to grow and is now firmly in
majority territory.
Unsurprisingly, weed has become big business —
sales in Colorado alone now top $1 billion a year.
A study by data
analytics firm New Frontier Data recently estimated that if marijuana
legalization went national, it could generate more than $10 billion of
tax revenue a year.
There's just one problem: Cannabis is still illegal under federal law. During the administration of President Barack Obama,
an uneasy détente existed in which the federal government agreed not to
prosecute marijuana production, sale and use in states where it was
legal. That effectively left things up to the states but left open the
possibility that the federal government might reverse itself and crack
down. This year, the crackdown came. Attorney General Jeff Sessions
announced that he was rescinding the Obama-era policy of tolerance, and
that marijuana users and growers in every state in the union now had to
fear arrest and prosecution by the feds.
But
Sessions may find himself increasingly isolated, even within his own
party. It's not just that public opinion has shifted. Unlike in past
federal crackdowns, cannabis is now an incumbent industry that fills
state coffers and can lobby legislators. Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., had
threatened to block Justice Department nominees unless Sessions backed off. President Donald Trump
appeared to concede, assuring the senator that there would be no
punishment for Colorado. Meanwhile, the Republican-controlled U.S.
Senate is pushing through a bill to legalize hemp, a non-intoxicating
variant of marijuana.
This is good news. Business and monetary
interests may succeed where civil liberties arguments failed, bringing
an end to the U.S.'s marijuana prohibition. And not a moment too soon.
For
decades, marijuana opponents argued that it functioned as a gateway
drug — that users would eventually get bored and be tempted to move onto
stronger substances. This argument persisted for a long time since it's
hard to verify or disprove without actually getting people to regularly
use marijuana, something no university ethics board would approve. Even
if you happen to find a correlation between marijuana use and the abuse
of drugs such as heroin and methamphetamine, that doesn't tell you
much; it could easily just be that the people most likely to go on to
hard drugs tend to start with cheaper, more plentiful ones like
marijuana.
But the legalization of marijuana presents a natural
experiment that allows us to test the gateway-drug argument. If
anything, it looks like the opposite is true. In states that legalized
marijuana for medicinal or recreational purposes, opioid prescriptions
fell substantially. Opioid overdoses fell too.
In Colorado, marijuana
legalization was followed by a drop in teen abuse of heroin. Opiate
overdoses, which had been climbing steadily in Colorado, suddenly began
to fall after cannabis became legal.
Instead of a gateway drug, marijuana looks like it's a
substitute for more addictive, more toxic substances. At a time when the
U.S. is suffering a devastating epidemic of opioid and heroin abuse,
marijuana's use as a substitute for these harder drugs is much needed.
Another
fear was that legal marijuana would lead to an increase in criminality.
But a team of economists found that liberalization of state marijuana
laws led to no increase in youth criminal behavior.
A second
paper, by economists James Conklin, Moussa Diop and Herman Li, used a
very interesting method to evaluate one aspect of legal weed's impact
— they looked at house prices.
When recreational cannabis was legalized,
many medical marijuana dispensaries converted to retail marijuana
stores. Conklin et al. found that near these stores, housing prices
almost immediately rose by about 8 percent relative to houses in other
areas.
If legal marijuana brought crime and bad behavior, we would
have expected to see a drop in housing prices close to where the drug
is sold. That's exactly what does happen with prostitution — a brothel
in the Netherlands lowers the surrounding home values, presumably by
making an area dangerous and disreputable. Because marijuana does the
opposite suggests that it probably has an enduring future as a
respectable, wealth-creating business activity.
So Republicans are
doing the right thing by moving to strengthen protections for legal
marijuana.
Sessions remains a regrettable holdout, but hopefully
President Donald Trump will accede to the tide of history and rein in
his regressive attorney general. Repealing the federal law against
marijuana use, and leaving legalization entirely up to the states, is
the logical next step.
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