Pubdate: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2005 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Hal Glatzer Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1817/a06.html LEGAL POT NOT TAX WINDFALL AS ESTIMATED Editor -- David Lazarus makes the case for legalizing and taxing pot very well ("The case for legal pot use," Lazarus at Large, Nov. 20). But while I advocate the same position, for the same law-enforcement-related reasons, I question the projections he cites for revenue from taxation. If pot were truly legal, the cost of production would not merely go lower, it would fall to insignificance. The retail price would shrink by 80 to 90 percent, and would, at that point, be nearly all tax. Pot, today, sells for $100 to $300 per ounce in legal pot clubs - about the same price range as for (illegal) street pot, because so many suppliers serve both markets. For them, the big-ticket item is protection - not only from the law but from thieves. Indoor growers have to rent houses or warehouses, and their high-wattage lamps run up big utility bills. Many outdoor growers, particularly the cartels who cultivate pot on remote public lands, have to pay for guns and armed guards and long supply lines. And the illegal market is crammed with middlemen. No wonder each plant grown in a national forest was reported by The Chronicle to be worth $4,000. In fact, the true cost of growing pot is trivial. At most, it's a couple of dollars per ounce. Even top-quality seeds are a one-time investment, because some or all of the plants can be allowed to produce fresh seeds. Indoors under lights, or outdoors in the sunnier climes, this botanically annual plant can be pruned and kept in production for an extra year. That, along with sequential germination, obviates the need for, and the cost of, all-at-once harvesting and replanting. In a legal market, too, good farmland (or indoor spaces) would become available closer to consumers, shrinking even transportation as a serious cost item. And demand may not grow too much larger, overall, after legalization. Just as people can make their own wine and beer today, consumers could grow their own pot and supply friends and family for little or no remuneration. While most people won't do that (most people don't grow their own vegetables), those who do will to some extent offset the increase in retail demand from first-time or returning consumers. Today's retail prices -- the prices upon which most projections for tax revenues are based -- can not be maintained in a truly legal marketplace. I expect that the actual cost of legal production, packaging and distribution -- the base price for pot -- will be about $5 per ounce. And as with tobacco, consumers will then pay more for the tax than for the weed itself: I expect the legal retail price will settle in the range of $20 to $50 per ounce. And that's a fair price, I think, as it's comparable to the price of (and offers more or less the same intoxicating potential as) a bottle of distilled spirits. So, while it would be wise for California to legalize pot because law-enforcement efforts would be better deployed elsewhere, I expect the state will earn only millions, not billions, from taxing it. Hal Glatzer San Francisco - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake