4/20... Legalizing Marijuana Would Generate Billions In Additional Tax Revenue Annually

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/20/legalizing-marijuana-tax-revenue_n_3102003.html

As Washington lawmakers struggle to find ways to balance the national budget, a significant source of revenue may be burning away right before their eyes.

The federal legalization of marijuana would offer a large new revenue stream, according to research from the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.
"We don’t know the size of the marijuana market right now, and we certainly don’t know what would happen to the price and the demand for marijuana under different levels of legalization," Carl Davis, senior analyst at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy told The Huffington Post. "But we do know that legalization would lead to a positive revenue impact on the income and sales tax side."
According to a 2010 study from Cato, legalizing marijuana would generate $8.7 billion in federal and state tax revenue annually.
The researchers assumed that legalized marijuana would be taxed similarly to alcohol and tobacco and that the income earned by pot producers would be subject to standard income and sales tax.
Taxes aren't the only source of revenue that would come from legalizing weed, according to the study. State and local governments also stand to save billions of dollars that they currently spend regulating marijuana use.
Washington and Colorado, both states that have legalized the use of marijuana recreationally, will serve as litmus tests to measure the possible fiscal impact of marijuana legalization on a national level. The state of Washington estimates it will generate as much as $1.9 billion in additional revenue in five years due to the legalization of marijuana.
Eighteen states and Washington, D.C. have already made medical marijuana legal and 10 others are currently considering leglislation to legalize medical marijuana, according to the National Cannabis Industry Association.
A majority of Americans support weed legalization, according to a recent Pew Research Center poll.
Still, opponents of marijuana legalization argue that any fiscal benefits from legalization are outweighed by the social impact. Legal weed will continue to contribute to violence, crime, and social disintegration of the country, according to a report from the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.
The research was done by Jeffrey Miron and Katherine Waldock.
 

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8.7 billion seems like a crazy big number to me. If that's the case, then I am all for legalization and I don't smoke at all.
 

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It would put lots of farmers to work as well.
Also pizza delivery drivers see a windfall as well.
 

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While I do agree with legalization for the most part. 21+, strict driving laws I must say 8.7B is honestly nothing.
 
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It would put lots of farmers to work as well.
Also pizza delivery drivers see a windfall as well.

There'd certainly be a run on Doritos. Btw, the government could also help themselves out by legalizing sports betting. Hello Washington?!!!
 

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Handicapper
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It could be huge. 8.7B could be nothing. More people have tried or want to smoke marijuana than they have tobacco.
 

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Employers will be busy testing employees more frequent if they legalizing pot.
More people get high, more will get fired.
I would think tax revenue will be much less, if not a wash.
 

Rx Alchemist.
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Brilliant, the taxes raised will help pay the healthcare costs associated with the effects of smoking weed.
 

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Across the country, the business of growing pot is fast becoming mainstream. Eighteen states and the District of Columbia have approved the use and production of marijuana for medicinal use, including two states, Colorado and Washington, that also allow recreational use. That has spurred on a cottage industry of professional growers, with an estimated 2,000 to 4,000 businesses now producing the plant for legal purposes. Total sales: $1.2 billion to $1.3 billion last year, according to the National Cannabis Industry Association.

But it turns out that trying to make a profit in this business is harder than expected. When grown and sold legally, marijuana can be an expensive proposition, with high startup costs, a host of operational headaches and state regulations that a beet farmer could never imagine. In Colorado, for example, managers must submit to background checks that include revealing tattoos. The state also requires cameras in every room that has plants; Mr. Klug relies on 48 of them.
Prices for pot, meanwhile, have plummeted, in large part because of growing competition. And bank financing is out of the question: Federal law doesn't allow these businesses, and agents sometimes raid growers even in states where it is legal.
 

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lol, legalizing weed would crush online gambling in terms of revenue with 1/10th the societal issues that come from it.

So no social issues would come from this?

Legal gambling barely has any issues, look at England and Australia.
 

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Not only would it generate revenue but it would cut billions in spending.
 

Rx Dragon Puller
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Not only would it generate revenue but it would cut billions in spending.
Would be crazy to know the actual numbers on court costs, policing and other costs of battling the ganja
 

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8.7 billion seems like a crazy big number to me. If that's the case, then I am all for legalization and I don't smoke at all.


I agree. Who cares if it brings my taxes down
 

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So no social issues would come from this?

Legal gambling barely has any issues, look at England and Australia.

Doesn't seem to be causing many in Colorado or California.

Obviously I am pro-both but legalizing online gambling wouldn't be near the boon weed would.
 

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this would employee many workers for the corporations that do the production/distribution/etc as well.. but I think its highly unlikely the government ever gives in.

-murph
 

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