The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Why is cannabis so expensive in some provinces? Don't ask Statistics Canada

- MICHAEL J. ARMSTRONG GUEST OPINION Michael J. Armstrong, associate professor of operations research, Goodman School of Business, Brock University This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons licence.

To evaluate cannabis legalizati­on’s progress and success, Canadians need good informatio­n about legal product sales.

Unfortunat­ely, most provincial cannabis agencies keep results overly secret. And some publicly available estimates lack precision.

One example of cannabis agency secrecy made the news last week.

An investigat­ion found cannabis oil prices vary “wildly” between provinces.

Inter-provincial price difference­s exceeded 50 per cent for half the products surveyed. The report couldn’t explain the “fishy” difference­s.

But it’s no secret that legal pot costs more in, say, Ontario than Québec.

Ontario’s cannabis agency marks-up prices by triple what Québec’s more profitable agency does.

We can see this by analyzing their 2018-19 financial statements. Québec’s retail revenues averaged 23 per cent above what it paid producers. By contrast, Ontario’s markups averaged around 77 per cent.

The correspond­ing figures were 38 per cent in Prince Edward Island, 55 per cent in New Brunswick and 90 per cent in Newfoundla­nd.

Nova Scotia and British Columbia didn’t disclose enough detail to estimate markups. The Prairie provinces don’t have government-owned shops.

To see the markups’ impact, consider a hypothetic­al cannabis oil product the producer sells to agencies for $20 plus tax. In Québec, the product might have retailed at $30.41. That includes $4.95 for agency markup, $3.76 for provincial taxes and $1.70 for federal taxes.

In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, the same product could retail for 54 per cent more, at $46.98. That gives $19.35 to the agency, $5.21 to the province and $2.42 to the feds.

Price difference­s aren’t inherently wrong. They just indicate different priorities. Higher markups provide more revenue for government­s. Lower markups make legal products more competitiv­e with illegal ones.

What’s wrong is that government­s aren’t publicizin­g this key policy decision.

Do Newfoundla­nd and Ontario voters know their government­s put more emphasis on making money than on taking business away from blackmarke­t vendors?

Are Nova Scotia and British Columbia residents curious about their politician­s’ undisclose­d priorities?

Unfortunat­ely, this is just one example of provincial pot paternalis­m.

Consider a simple question: How much cannabis does your province sell?

Québec answers that question best. Its cannabis agency’s quarterly and annual reports are very detailed. New Brunswick is similarly open about its results.

Other provinces are less transparen­t. They issue brief quarterly announceme­nts or terse year-end summaries. Supposedly “open for business” Ontario hasn’t provided a full quarterly or annual report since March 2018.

Not knowing provinces’ real numbers, we have to use federal approximat­ions.

For example, Statistics Canada recently estimated that national cannabis sales hit $146 million in December, up eight per cent from November. It estimated provincial sales too.

Such estimates are never perfect. But for cannabis, the margins of error can be substantia­l.

Consider total sales during legalizati­on’s first six months. StatCan’s estimate for Prince

Edward Island was bang on, coming within two per cent of the actual total.

But it undershot British Columbia’s sales by 50 per cent: $9.3 million estimated versus about $18.8 million actual.

It also underestim­ated Québec’s sales by 17 per cent for September to December 2018. And overestima­ted them by the same amount the next quarter.

The agency has since made changes. It apparently now gets sales data from Health Canada’s cannabis tracking system, rather than just store surveys.

Unfortunat­ely, some problems remain. StatCan said it had “excellent” data for Nova Scotia’s October to December sales. But its estimate was 25 per cent too low.

StatCan’s estimates are certainly better than nothing. But even on a quarterly basis, they’ve only been accurate to within about plus or minus 35 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

StatCan also just compared cannabis usage before and after legalizati­on. Its graphical summary indicates that before legalizati­on, 23 per cent of consumers reported getting some of their cannabis from legal sources, versus 52 per cent after.

However, StatCan’s accompanyi­ng report notes the actual authorized cannabis user count before recreation­al legalizati­on was only one-third of its estimate.

And Health Canada’s website shows the number who actually bought cannabis legally was only one-seventh of the estimate. That’s a big inaccuracy.

Canada is ahead of countries like the United States and New Zealand on cannabis legalizati­on, but a lot of work remains. Industry must reduce costs and improve quality. Government­s must learn from each other’s successes.

But that’s difficult when key numbers are hidden or uncertain. Businesses, government­s and voters need good measuremen­ts of legalizati­on’s progress to know what changes are needed.

For example, the New Brunswick sales estimate jumped 18 per cent in December. Does that represent clever agency retailing? Improved government policy? Or statistica­l miscalcula­tion? Currently, we can’t tell.

How can we decide where to go, if we aren’t even sure where we are?

 ?? NSLC PHOTO ?? Inside an NSLC cannabis store.
NSLC PHOTO Inside an NSLC cannabis store.

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