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Pot laws are not about all or nothing

What is really at stake if B.C. follows Washington State and Colorado and successfully legalizes marijuana? Money, of course, that other green substance. Let's start with the estimated value of the illicit pot growing industry here in B.C.

What is really at stake if B.C. follows Washington State and Colorado and successfully legalizes marijuana?

Money, of course, that other green substance. Let's start with the estimated value of the illicit pot growing industry here in B.C. It's often claimed to be between $6 to $8 billion, a fairly rough estimate given that none of the principals are filling out any corporate tax forms or quarterly earning reports.

Even if it's lower than the estimates, it's a huge industry. By contrast, in 2011 the entire forest industry had a value of just under $10 billion.

If the local pot growing economy goes legit, we'll see some unusual effects, only some of them strictly economic.

Everyone who argues for legalization points out that we can then tax the bejezus out of marijuana. How much would that raise?

In B.C., the tax rate for small businesses is 2.5 per cent, 10 per cent for big businesses. Let's assume, very conservatively, that we get nothing but small Mom and Pop artisinal ganja growers and small-scale retailers. Let's also take the lower $6 billion valuation of the industry.

That would mean about $150 million in provincial tax revenues off the top.

But wait! The cost of growing pot will drop substantially if it's legal, and grown in the open. Maybe it won't be that costly to sell?

Except that it will be taxed at the point of sale, too. So that's another few million bucks a year. Sin taxes, plus sales taxes, add up quickly. And that's not even considering the federal tax implications. Then there are the personal income taxes that would be paid by those legally employed in the industry.

So what about effects beyond the purely taxa-tional?

We have no grow ops in houses, because growing outdoors or in greenhouses is cheaper, so there are a few more houses on the market than otherwise. Not enough to bring down prices, though.

We have a whole lot of unemployed criminals. Some fraction of them will go legit and turn themselves into small farmers and storekeepers. Others. will not make this transition.

I'm thinking of the Langley man who stabbed another man to death purely out of the suspicion that the other man might have stolen his pot plants. It's hard to imagine a rage-filled killer fitting in well at a chamber of commerce meeting.

So some gangsters are going to try to move into the remaining illicit drugs, like heroin and cocaine. There might be a gang war as the crooks fight over the pieces of a smaller pie.

While we'll see more government tax revenues, this will be somewhat offset.

A significant number of small businesses will close their doors. They'll all be places that could plausibly accept a lot of cash payments: restaurants, bars, hair and nail salons, corner stores, and so on. Because in every community where there are pot growers, there is a need to launder money.

In the long term, our society wouldn't look a lot different. Some people smoke pot now, some people will never smoke it if it's legal. (Like me.) People commit crimes now, they're not going to stop if pot is legal.

Things could be a bit more stable, both tax-and crime-wise in the long term, but it won't turn B.C. into a magical land of unicorns and pixies.

But we don't make policy decisions based on false ideas that we will create utopias or dystopias. We should make them based on what seems like best practices. To me, it looks like things would be better with legal marijuana than with the current system.

Matthew Claxton writes for the Langley Advance.