Why stoners should be stoked about colorado's new weed tax

Why stoners should be stoked about colorado's new weed tax

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On Tuesday, Colorado residents voted to impose several new taxes on the state's fledgling legalized pot industry. That includes a 15 percent excise tax for growers and a 10 percent tax


on marijuana sales to consumers, which will come on top of the state's existing 2.9 percent sales tax. At first glance, this seems like bad news for stoners. Who wants to pay an


additional 27.9 percent in taxes on something that, before yesterday, was tax-free? Don't worry, thrifty smokers; you will probably end up with some extra cash in your wallet. That is


because while black-market weed was untaxed, it came loaded with extra costs. SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEK Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple


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to your inbox. From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. Drug dealers don't just charge for their


product. They charge you for the risk they take selling you the product, and the fact that you don't have many other options. And their suppliers face serious challenges, as


_Slate_'s Matthew Yglesias explained last year: Most of the funds from the weed tax will go towards regulation of Colorado's marijuana industry — an important step if the state


wants to avoid problems with the federal government, which, despite assurances that it won't challenge Colorado's new law, still technically considers the drug illegal. A study by


RAND Corporation on the potential effects of legalizing pot in California found that the price of weed would "dramatically drop" as "growers move from clandestine operations


to legal production" — possibly even falling to $38 per ounce compared to the $375 it cost in 2010. In Colorado, _TIME_'s Brad Tuttle wrote earlier this year, legalization would


make "a pot-smoking habit" even "cheaper than a cigarette-smoking habit." Over-taxation does come with risks. That 25 percent hike is far higher than Colorado's tax


on alcohol, creating the risk of "a marijuana market ripe for takeover by the unregulated, untaxed, underground market," warned Denver attorney Rob Corry, who led a group that


opposed the tax. A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com But even anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist backs Colorado's voters,


telling the _National Journal_ that it's "not a tax increase" because when something is illegal, the government is pretty much putting a 100 percent tax on it. Instead, he


said, Colorado's government is "legalizing an activity and having the traditional tax applied to it." All in all, Colorado pot smokers might look back on Tuesday as a


historically chill day for stoners.