Also available at Cannabis in Canada.ca
Joining the licensed producer monopoly is an expensive endeavour. It cost the Lexaria Corporation at least $20,000-a-month
during their pursuit of a Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations
(MMPR) application. Ultimately, the venture proved too costly. The food
sciences company, focused primarily on cannabinoid compounds, has sold
its interest in a Burlington, Ontario-based MMPR application citing
“rising capital expenditure costs of construction and set-up, and rising
ongoing costs of compliance with Health Canada regulations,” as their
primary reasons for pulling out. This is something Cannabis in Canada
has reiterated time and time again and even Lexaria's own press release
alludes to the issue: Health Canada, through the MMPR, has “lessened
the attractiveness of the legal marijuana growing market in Canada,”
relative to other interests.
An application that can cost up to
$20,000-a-month is not a result of the “free market” no matter how many
times the term is used. Cannabis is a prohibited product; even for
medical uses the federal government criminalizes production or sale of
cannabis by anyone who isn't properly licensed. That used to include the
30,000-plus growers in Canada who now exist in legal purgatory. Under
the MMPR, the number of producers licensed to grow and sell has dwindled
to 19.
There is nothing “free market” about prohibiting the
production and sale of medical cannabis to 19 privileged producers. The
federal government is in fact strengthening prohibition laws. Without
Canada's other market of medical cannabis farmers (50% of who
are in BC), patients are at risk of losing their medicine. The supply
for Canada's retail dispensaries and compassion clubs are not coming
from the LPs. But by restricting the legal supply of cannabis to the
LPs, the MMPR has created arbitrage opportunities. The LPs have
flexibility not awarded to the former farmers under the older
regulations. In the future, this may include supplying the retail
dispensaries, since the LPs are the only legal sellers.
The
MMPR encourages the political allocation of medical cannabis. Since the
LPs have quasi-monopoly grants to produce a prohibited good, and since
these grants specify how to produce the good, patients aren't deciding
the kind of market they want. LPs must engage in politically motivated
decisions because they have fewer avenues for information on supply and
demand. LPs do have some competitors, but that number is arbitrarily
restricted. In addition, each LP has a differently shaped demand curve
for their cannabis. The LPs whose demand curves are inelastic reap the
monopoly gain. Medical cannabis itself already has an inelastic demand
curve in part because it is a medical necessity. Giving LPs
quasi-monopolies won't do anything to correct this; it will in fact make
things worse. Licensing fees and the other “ongoing costs of compliance
with Health Canada regulations” act as penalty taxes on smaller firms
with less capital. Lexaria Corporation, at $20,000-a-month, was one of
these “smaller” firms.
In contrast, an entrepreneur can just open
up a dispensary and start selling cannabis. There aren't even business
licenses in most cases. A dispensary owner can look to see if his
revenue is rising or falling. Rising revenues would indicate patients
are happy with his business and keep returning for the excellent goods
and services. Falling revenue would indicate the opposite. That's what a
free market is.
Inefficiencies get introduced into production as
regulatory requirements put more emphasis on security measures than on
other factors consumers ultimately value higher. A misallocation of
resources and a malinvestment of capital are inevitable as LPs are cut
off from the price signals of a genuine free market. Specific goods used
in production mean less investment into other lines of production. For
example, all financial investment into security measures may have been
better used in research and development. This is information only
entrepreneurs have, and they acquire it by assessing market conditions.
The economizing activity in the market is hampered due to
regulations/political allocations of resources and capital. In this
controlled market for medical cannabis, the LPs are in a superior
position vis-à-vis the patients.
In a free and fair market, there
are no government-granted monopolies and cartels. The market-clearing
price is set by sellers looking to maximize revenue. They will raise
prices to the point that if they raise them any further their total
revenue will drop. In retail dispensaries and compassion clubs,
market-clearing prices are established through voluntary trade between
buyers and sellers. As well, in Vancouver, there are 90 other
dispensaries to compete with. Although still subject to other factors,
prices in Vancouver's dispensaries are relatively elastic. That is to
say, it would be unprofitable for the dispensaries to raise their prices
beyond the market-clearing price. But it's different with the LPs and
other controlled industries. It would be profitable for them to
raise prices beyond the market-clearing price. And they can do so,
while protecting their revenue, because of their quasi-monopoly grants
from the federal government. To the detriment of patients, the LPs
profit.
The LPs are not really competing with each other since a
patient can only register with one LP at a time. To patronize two LPs
simultaneously would require getting two different prescriptions and
there's no guarantee that would work. As it stands, once one registers
with an LP, one is stuck with that producer unless he or she wishes to
start the prescription/registration process all over again. With these
kind of restrictions – nothing like the retail market – the LPs are in a
position to raise prices and restrict output. And indeed, with some at $15 a gram, and predictions of shortages absent of Allard, this is exactly the result we're getting.
Not
only are the LPs detached from the “free market” they were advertised
as being, we can't even say the LPs are economizing in the traditional
sense of the word. Through their quasi-monopoly grants, resources that
are used up in creating and maintaining LPs that may have actually had
more highly valued uses in other sectors of the economy.
It is the
incentive of every LP to use their revenue from quasi-monopoly grants
to capitalize on the legal privilege itself. That is, use the extra
money you make from having a quasi-monopoly to ensure that the number of
competitors stays low. This can be done by contributing to political
campaigns and lobbying. It's also popular to have crony-capitalists
“hire” people for non-existent positions in their company. These
employees are officially paid for purposes other than lobbying but
political lobbying is all they do.
Finally, there is the argument
for quality control, as if every negative aspect of the MMPR can be
saved by superior quality standards. But why are they superior? LP
quality control is simply what the government – not the patients –
defines as “lower-quality” or “higher-quality” cannabis. In the freer
and fairer retail dispensary market, patients define the relative term
of “quality” by buying (or not buying) according to their personal
tastes and preferences. Quality standards merely shift decisions from
the patient to arbitrary government bureaus that impose rigidities and
monopolization. In a free market, there are numerous ways to address
fraudulent sellers. There is no guarantee that an army of government
administrators can or will do the job. And that is the ultimate lesson
of the MMPR.
There is no guarantee that an army of government
administrators can or will do a better job than the matrix of hundreds
of thousands of patients, dispensary and compassion club owners, and the
30,000-plus growers who existed before the MMPR and continue to fight
their battle in court. The MMPR can only be redeemed if the former
growers are grandfathered in and the government red-tape for prospective
LPs is greatly reduced, with acknowledgement that the greater supply of
cannabis, the less value it fetches on the street and thus the excessive
security requirements are unnecessary. Furthermore, all patients
should have the option of growing a small number of plants for
themselves. However, if or when these changes are made, the
modifications would be so numerous that an entirely new regulatory
scheme may be needed. But why? If patients have an exemption from the Controlled Drugs & Substances Act
as it relates to cannabis, why not let an industry – including a
regulatory industry – build up around that exemption? Patients don't
need a federally mandated exemption scheme; they just need to be left
alone.
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