Transcript Power Point
Illegal Drugs
It’s the Economy, Man
Review of Sex, Drugs & Economics
Written by Diane Coyle
Reviewed by Alan Jennings
3 Views on Drug Use
• Drug use is Evil
– War against drugs for drug-free society
• Drug use is Illness
– Medical Treatment
– Social Programs
• People should be Free to use Drugs
– Show tolerance,
– As long as it doesn’t harm others
Premises
Drug Use is Inevitable
Premises
Greek and Aztec used drugs
In some Countries,
• Up to half the population have used drugs
illegally
– Can something so popular be illegal?
– Can so many criminals be meaningful?
• Most people say the odd joint does not make
a person bad or a criminal
Drugs are not addictive
Premises
• In Switzerland,
– 17% have tried drugs, 2% have used in last year
• Vietnam Veterans used Heroin
– Stopped when coming home
• Drug consumption is much less in people
over thirty
• Hard drugs are addictive,
– But many quit anyways
Drugs use and Crime
Premises
• Most income for addicts comes from crime
– More than 33% -Drug Dealing
– More than 47% -Burglary, Assault & Prostitution
• Illegal drugs use makes crime seem normal
• Restricts ghettos from developing
– Poverty, Violence
Drugs as Market Item
What has been observed:
• Demand
Price
Heroin
Price
• Substantial Health Costs
• Cash Crop for Countries
– Normally Poor & Violent
Premise
Therefore Supply
# of Deaths
Government Intervention
Economics
• Penalties Affects Supply or Demand
Supply Side
Demand Side
Harsh penalties for:
Less penalties for users
• Dealing
People cut back use
• Importing
• Manufacturing
More Risk
Competition Decays
1.
2.
3.
4.
Economics
Prohibition reduces supply
Competition is reduced as businesses leave
Cost increase
Near monopoly
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Formed by police and customs stopping drugs
Enforced violently by existing drug dealers
5. Organized Crime spreads globally
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Supported by high profits
Externalities & Elasticity
Economics
• Private Choices cost society as whole
• Reason for taxes on drugs (tobacco & spirits)
– High public health cost supported by tax revenue
• Elasticity
– How much quantity is affected by cost?
– No change, Price is inelastic, Tax affect is small
– Changes, Price is elastic, Tax affects significantly
Cost/Benefit Analysis
Economics
• Weighing benefits to losses gives insight into
best solutions
• Consider penalties relaxed or use sanctioned
Benefit
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More competition
Lower price
Less crime,
Lower policing cost
More taxes
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Costs
More users
More health costs
Loss of productivity
Leads to worse drugs
Premises
Response
Premises are taken as fact for argument’s basis
– No matter how unsubstantiated, false or harmful
• Sources:
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Survey results
Antidotal
Generalizations
Most completely unverifiable
• Minority trying to enforce opinion on majority
– Majority of Americans do not use illicit drugs
– More position is spread, the more their own view is justified
• Drugs are addictive
– Drug use against all hazard shows irrational compelling force
Economics
Response
• Government affect on Market
– Clear example of punitive restrictions
• Emergence of Monopoly
– Demonstrates set of factors leading to monopoly
– Ease of production not mentioned,
• Undermines monopoly
• Reasons for Government involvement
– Treats taxes a revenue
• Maximize drain on public
• Ignores concern for citizens well being, only health
Cost/ Benefit Analysis
Response
Other analysis is to result in Cost/ Benefit Analysis
• Rightly commended as powerful tool
• However, should mention discretion in evaluating
– Costs and benefits should be weighed not just by money
• Should qualify her conclusion is for her values
– Has high value on government profitability
– Has high value on independence
– Has low value for individual burdens of addiction
• Ignores broader impacts
– Everything would have to then be designed for possible
use by people under influence
• Is currently done as a failsafe, but would then need additional line
Conclusion
Horrible, impersonal views
used for analyzing in a skewed but
useful manner
Alan Jennings
Coyle, Diane. 2004. Sex, Drugs & ECONOMICS: An Unconventional Introduction to
Economics. Thomson Texere, New York, New York. Chapter 2. pp 8-16.