Toronto Star

Legal pot revenue could reach $5B a year

New CIBC economic report estimates Liberals’ promise will generate billions in taxes

- BRUCE CHEADLE THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— Call it Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s secret stash.

Areport from CIBC World Markets says Canada’s federal and provincial government­s could reap as much as $5 billion annually in tax revenues from the sale of legal marijuana.

CIBC economist Avery Shenfeld crunched the numbers using estimates of Canadian recreation­al pot use, the revenue experience in U.S. states that have legalized and other factors — such as prevailing “sin tax” rates on alcohol and tobacco.

“The bottom line is that federal (and) provincial government­s might reap as much as $5 billion from legalizati­on, but only if all the undergroun­d sales are effectivel­y curtailed,” writes Shenfeld.

“That’s on the order of 0.25 per cent of GDP, no barnburner.”

The Liberal government has promised to legalize, tax and regulate marijuana and made MP Bill Blair, the former Toronto police chief, the lead on investigat­ing a new regulatory model.

Trudeau maintains that legalized pot will not be a cash cow and that all revenues will be used to address mental health and addictions issues.

“It was never about a money-maker, it was always about public health, public safety,” he said in December.

The experience of Washington state and Colorado, where pot sales were legalized and taxed, suggests no dramatic increase in marijuana usage but a potential for pot tourism.

“The desirabili­ty of increased marijuana tourism inflows will be questioned, no doubt, but they would generate additional fiscal revenues for government on their other tourist spending,” Shenfeld writes.

The report uses Colorado sales figures to estimate a Canadian pot market worth about $10 billion annually, then looks at net profit margins from Ontario’s government booze monopoly and other associated income and payroll taxes to come up with the revenue total.

Shenfeld also suggests that the oft-touted law enforcemen­t savings from pot legalizati­on may not materializ­e due to ongoing internatio­nal obligation­s to stop marijuana exports and the enforcemen­t needed to curb the untaxed black market.

“Deficits won’t simply go up in smoke as a result,” he concludes.

 ??  ?? CIBC economist Avery Shenfeld says a legalized pot market in Canada could be worth up to 0.25 per cent of GDP.
CIBC economist Avery Shenfeld says a legalized pot market in Canada could be worth up to 0.25 per cent of GDP.

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