Legalized marijuana as a tax boon? Don't count on it
Let the good times roll? Questions remain over how much governments will make from legalized marijuana
It's not every day you find a few spare billion dollars in your pocket. But if you did, what would you do with it?
That's the potentially happy problem facing the federal government and the provinces if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau follows through on his plan to legalize marijuana, according to the best efforts of some economists to — pardon the pun — read the tea leaves.
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The tax revenue derived from the sale of legalized pot would split about $5 billion per year between federal and provincial coffers, according to a recent report from CIBC World Markets, based on the apparent size of the current underground market and how legalization has played out for the state governments of Colorado and Washington.
The CIBC report assumes one or more "sin taxes" — similar to those currently applied to tobacco and alcohol sales — would be applied to marijuana, and that the country's current recreational market is, per capita, comparable to that of Washington, which legalized pot in 2012.
The report also assumes that legalization will not lead to an increase in recreational marijuana use, based on observations in both U.S. states, nor will it cut into consumption of alcohol.
Nobody knows the size of this market.— Mike Moffatt, Western University
Canada can also expect to make some extra money off "tourist buyers" — those who will travel from the U.S. and elsewhere to enjoy legalized pot. Not unlike the generations of young Americans who have been lured north by our lower legal drinking ages.
"The desirability of increased marijuana tourism inflows will be questioned, no doubt," report author Avery Shenfeld writes, "but they would generate additional fiscal revenues for government on their other tourist spending."
But Shenfeld also notes the grand total of some $5 billion is only about 0.25 per cent of the GDP and thus "no barnburner."