On February 26th 1909 foreign diplomats gathered in Shanghai for the first ever international effort to take on narcotics. In the subsequent 100 years, there have been numerous attempts through international treaties and organisation to end the drugs trade.
In 1998 the UN General Assembly committed to achieving a ''drug free world'' and to ''eliminating or significantly reducing'' the production of opium, cocaine and cannabis by 2008. This was a hugely irresponsible promise, as its chances of success were so negligible.
This week, a meeting in Vietnam of various statesmen will decide drug policy for the next decade. Unsurprisingly, it will bring more of the same, when in fact, the recent war on drugs, on a global scale, has been a catastrophe. It has created failed states out of developing nations and addiction has flourished in the developed world. This 100 year struggle has been murderous,illiberal and more importantly pointless, which is why, the best policy would be to legalise drugs. This is not to say it would benefit all involved. Certainly most producer nations would benefit, however the risks for consumer nations would vary, however, in my view more would gain.
Proof of Failure
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime claims that the drug market has ''stabilised'' meaning that more than 200m people worldwide, or to put that into perspective, 5% of the globe's adult population take drugs. The same amount as 10 years ago. Opium and Cocaine production is at the same level, whilst cannabis is higher. In the US consumption of cocaine has declined gradually from its early 80s peak, however it remains relatively high (more so than the mid 90s) and is rising in Europe.
However this is not for lack of trying. The US spends $40 billion each year attempting to eliminate the drugs supply, arresting 1.5 million people per year in the process. It puts around half a million of them behind bars; tough drug laws are the chief reason why 1 in 5 black Americans spend time locked up. The developing world fares much worse. In Mexico, since 2006, 800 policemen and soldiers have been killed, the annual overall death toll is currently at 6000. The leader of one of the many drug ridden nations, Guinea Bissau, was assassinated.
Ironically, it is the prohibition itself, that increases the profits of drug suppliers. The price of drugs is determined by the cost of distribution, not the cost of production. For example cocaine: the mark up between a coca field and a consumer is 5000%. Government actions, such as the dropping of pesticides on drug fields would raise the local price of coca dramatically, however it would have very little effect on the street price in the US or Europe, which is set by the cost of smuggling the drugs into said countries.
This example of government repression forces it to shift production sites, thus opium has moved from Turkey to Myanmar,Thailand and Southern Afghanistan, where it hinders the actions of the ISAF forces, attempting to defeat the Taliban. This suggests that the drug business is able to adapt to market disruption quickly and effectively.
The Rise of Global Gangsterism
The prohibition of the drugs trade has encouraged gangsterism on unheard scale. According to the UN's (somewhat inflated) estimate, the drug's industry is worth $320 billion per year. In the developed world it turns law abiding citizens into criminals (The youthful experiments with ''blow'' from a certain Barack Obama could have put him behind bars). It also increases the health risks associated with drugs, buying heavily adultered substances and using dirty needles, in turn spreading the risk of HIV and other diseases. Many addicts enter into a thrall like service with their dealers in return for drugs, at an extremely high risk to themselves. However it is the developing world that continues to suffer the brunt of the damage. Even in relatively developed nations such as Mexico find themselves in a brutal struggle against these gangsters.
The failure of the war on narcotics has induced a few of the more courageous officials to suggest shifting the focus from repression to ''harm reduction'' for example, public health, the supply of clean needles etc. This would emphasise public education on the matter and the treatment of addicts, whilst reducing the harrassment suffered by coca growers and ''soft'' drug consumers. This would be a progressive step, however it is doubtful such initiatives would receive adequate funding and it does not eliminate organised crime from the equation.
The Solution
Legalisation of drugs would change the very nature of the problem, from one of law and order, to one of public health, as it ought to be. Government regulation and tax of the trade, as well as the billions saved on law enforcement would enable public money to be spent on public education on the dangers of drugs, and the treatment of current addicts. The sale of drugs to minors, should of course remain banned. Drugs should be reclassified, and would merit different levels of taxation. This would be, admittedly niggly and imperfect, needing constant monitoring and hard to measure trade offs. The level of post tax prices should strike a balance between damping down use, and discouraging an illicit black market.
Selling this admittedly flawed idea to producer nations, would be fairly easy, where organised crime is seen as the bane of society. However consumer countries would be far more difficult to persuade. Americans and Europeans would see the benefit of this type of legislation for developing nations, and possibly its usefulness in the fight against terrorism, but what the adult voters would be concerned with, is their own children.
However that fear is based on an unproven premise; that more people would use drugs if they were legalised. There is no correlation between the harshness of drug laws and the incidence of drug taking. Nations with tougher stances on drugs, for example Britain and the US, have a higher number of drug takers, not fewer. Many officials blame this on cultural differences, however looking at fairly similar countries, tough rules make little difference to the number of users. For example liberal Sweden and harsh Norway have identical addiction rates. Legislation would reduce supply and demand (as the dangerous thrill factor would go). But admittedly it is difficult to argue that the sale of a product that is made more widely available, cheaper and safer would fall, and any honest legislator would be wise to assume that drug taking would rise.
However there are 2 key arguments, as to why prohibition should be scrapped, despite the possible rise in drug taking as a whole. The first being one of liberal principle. Some illegal drugs are indeed very harmful, however most are not (Tobacco is more addictive than virtually all of them). Most users, even of harder drugs like cocaine and heroin only do so infrequently, as a source of pleasure and enjoyment (as one would from a Marlboro or a Jack Daniels). The state should have no role to prevent them from doing so.
What about addiction? It partially falls under the first argument, as most of the harm is solely the user's. However addiction can and does inflict terrible pain upon the people in an addict's life, primarily their children as well as visiting numerous negative externalities upon the rest of society. This leads on to the second key argument: legalisation offers the chance to deal with addiction in the appropriate manner.
The reduction of information asymmetry-the provision of information on the health risks of surrounding drugs and appropriate price levels, governments would be able to steer consumers towards less harmful substances. Prohibition has enabled the proliferation of artificial drugs created in various laboratories. Legislation would encourage legitimate drug companies to improve the drugs consumers already use. The resources gained from tax and saved on repression would guarantee the treatment of addicts, an angle that would seem politically acceptable to major parties. The success of initiatives undertaken by administrations of developing nations in preventing its citizens smoking tobacco provides grounds for hope.
An Educated Guess OR Another Century of Misery?
Legislation would not drive gangsters completely out of drugs. Like alcohol and tobacco, each would suffer from tax aversion and rule subversion. It would not automatically fix failed states like Afghanistan. This solution is a messy one, but a century of failure argues for trying it.
It will just become a norm of society when drugs are legalized, and it will probably happen as more and more officials become corrupt.
In certain developing it is certainly shifting that way, although, as there is so much stigma attatched to the narcotics trade, unless ridiculous amounts of $ are spent bribing officials, it would never get to that point in the developed world, at least not in the forseeable future.
After a while, like fritz said, the illegal drugs would become considered the same way as tobacco; as a commodity. Not only would the world governments make a ton of money off of legalizing drugs, but the crime rate would go down. I say, that as long as there are appropriate regulations, legalizing illegal drugs is a good idea. Well-written post, btw.
Legalizing drugs would end drug cartels. Remember prohibition in America? Most criminal families came out of prohibition by illegally selling alcohol. If we legalized all drugs, drug cartels and terrorist groups would have no funding.
Legalizing drugs would end drug cartels. Remember prohibition in America? Most criminal families came out of prohibition by illegally selling alcohol. If we legalized all drugs, drug cartels and terrorist groups would have no funding.
Plus, all that money that was going to drug cartels and terrorist groups would go into the hands of Business owners and taxpayers instead.
There was actually a bill going through the United States senate pretty recently that would decriminalise marijuana. It would save millions and millions of dollars annually on monitoring trafficking, raids, arrests, keeping the offenders in prison, etc.
I'm not so sure about drugs that are a bit more...dangerous than marijuana though. Cocaine and meth will fuck you up; there's no denying that.
Alcohol can kill just as quickly as meth and heroin. It's addictive and destructive as well. But why do meth and heroin get such a bad rep? Alcohol is legal so it has a good name, meth is illegal so it gets a bad name? Why is that?
Trust me, you don't want things like meth, cocaine, and heroin legalized. Marijuana, no big deal really, but things like meth, cocaine, and heroin can cause major problems for people that use them, people around them, families, communities, etc. Legalizing things like that would cause a lot of trouble, such as horific birth defects and social problems from people so dependent of the drug their willing to do ANYTHING for it. It'd be like giving Charlie Manson command of an Army platoon or handing out hand grenades to an anger management group. Marijuana, legalize that if you want to, but you have got to draw the line somewhere. These things where all legal once and where illegalized for good reason.
Legalizing drugs would end drug cartels. Remember prohibition in America? Most criminal families came out of prohibition by illegally selling alcohol. If we legalized all drugs, drug cartels and terrorist groups would have no funding.
Exactly. And less sway over local populations.
Cocaine and meth will **** you up; there's no denying that.
Undeniably, however from my proposed solution, I believe that more addicts would gain from this than would lose out.
Why is that?
I'd put it down to culture. Drinking has a long tradition, especially in Europe. Yet if it had never received its pariah status, and was introduced to the US today on the illicit drugs market, it would be seen as one of the most harmful, addictive drugs on the market and would warrant untold media and police attention. Cirrhosis rates are still extremely high, even in developed countries, yet if alcohol was legalised the alcoholics (funny how no one refers to them as addicts) would receive much less help than they are getting now.
Anyway, look at the last 4 paragraphs of the OP, for the key arguments for the legalisation of these hard drugs.
that and I'd be able to do meth without fear of the cops catching me.
lige u wouldn't want to do meth, even if it was legalized..i u did it u would completely ruin ur life and lose all ur family and friends...
also if drugs get legalized (which i highly doubt would happen until some smart person found a way to reverse all their effects) it wont be in our life time, probably in like a 100 or 1000 years. by then we would all be dead. but if it does get legalized like someone before me said the drug dealers would lose their incomes to business owners and doctors... also if drugs to get legalized in our lifetime i gaurente u will see most of the people in ur neighborhood tripping out in the middle of the freeway. and that will not be pretty sight especially if there are any cars on the freeway.