National Post (National Edition)

CANNABIS NOT A POT OF GOLD.

- Michael J. armstrong Michael J. Armstrong is an associate professor in the Goodman School of Business at Brock University.

This month the federal government sent the first cannabis excise tax payments to the provinces. But almost none of the amounts was disclosed. That’s likely because the cheques were smaller than officials had expected. But perhaps it’s also because medical cannabis clients think the taxes are unfair.

British Columbia is the only province so far to disclose its excise tax revenues: $1.3 million for October to December 2018. It had expected $50 million total this fiscal year, but now will be lucky to get $3 million. Other provinces haven’t disclosed their receipts. Manitoba didn’t even mention cannabis revenues in last week’s budget.

We can, however, estimate pot tax revenues using other data. First consider the federal government’s share.

Health Canada data shows producers sold 20.3 tonnes of medical cannabis last quarter. They also apparently shipped 42 tonnes of recreation­al cannabis to distributo­rs. The federal cannabis excise tax portion is $0.25 per gram or 2.5 per cent of wholesale value, whichever is higher. This implies Ottawa received some $16 million in excise taxes last quarter. During that period, Statistics Canada says legal cannabis sales totalled $307 million. The five-percent federal goods and services tax would have generated $15 million from that. This suggests Ottawa earned about $31 million in GST and excise taxes on cannabis last quarter.

Estimating provincial revenues is trickier, as only recreation­al sales are broken down by province. But Health Canada reports medical shipments by province. Those can serve as rough indicators of sales.

For example, Nova Scotia sold $17.2 million of recreation­al cannabis last quarter, or 11 per cent of Canada’s total. Its most recent medical cannabis shipments represente­d four per cent of the national total. That implies medical sales were around $6.3 million. The province’s excise tax is $0.75 per gram or 7.5 per cent of value, while its harmonized sales tax share is 10 per cent. These imply Nova Scotia received roughly $6.2 million in excise and sales taxes.

Similar estimates for the other provinces are as follows: Newfoundla­nd $2.5 million; Nova Scotia $6.2 million; P.E.I. $1.1 million; New Brunswick $3.3 million; Quebec $14 million; Ontario $22 million; Manitoba $2.6 million; Saskatchew­an $1.2 million; Alberta $10 million; and British Columbia $2.2 million.

Adding the federal and provincial numbers gives a Canada-wide total of some $96 million. That’s $62 million from excise taxes and $34 million from sales taxes. Put another way, $59 million came from recreation­al cannabis and $37 million from medical.

The latter number is controvers­ial. Both users and producers of medical cannabis argue it should be tax-free like regular medicines. They feel it’s unfair to tax products that help with such ailments as epilepsy. But government­s worry tax exemptions could tempt recreation­al users. Some might switch to medical products to save money.

Here’s a potential compromise: remove excise and sales taxes on medical purchases, but only for cannabis oils. Dry (smoke-able) cannabis would remain taxable, as would cannabis edibles when they eventually arrive.

This could work because medical and recreation­al users have different preference­s. Last quarter, 74 per cent of medical purchases involved oils. Conversely, 72 per cent of recreation­al sales involved dry cannabis.

So, exempting cannabis oil medical sales would help most medical clients while tempting few recreation­al consumers. The federal government could include this change in its budget presentati­on on March 19.

At the same time, Ottawa should simplify its ungainly excise tax structure. Currently, producers deal with 13 different tax stickers and eight different tax formulas. The appropriat­e sticker and formula depends on shipping destinatio­ns and/or product values. If customer orders change and products get rerouted, the stickers and calculatio­ns must be redone.

Finally, the federal and provincial government­s should delete the $1 per gram minimum combined excise tax and simply charge 10 per cent of value. This would make it easier for legal vendors to offer valueprice­d products. T hat ’s important for competing against black market prices averaging just $6.51 per gram, as per a Statcan report released last week. At the end of 2018, black market sales still accounted for 80 per cent of Canadian recreation­al cannabis purchases. Streamlini­ng the tax regime, and lowering the cost of the legal product, will be an important part of driving that share down.

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