Litcius/Paper detail

The Effect of Cannabis Legalization on Substance Demand and Tax Revenues

Keaton Miller, Boyoung Seo

2021National Tax Journal40 citationsDOI

Abstract

Cannabis advocates argue that legalization will increase tax revenues. However, if legal substances are substitutes, cannabis revenues may cannibalize other taxes. We document substitution between legal cannabis products and alcohol and tobacco products using detailed administrative and scanner data from Washington State. We estimate a flexible demand system for legal substances and find legalizing cannabis leads to a 15 percent decrease in alcohol, mainly by liquor and wine, and 5 percent decrease in cigarette demand. Approximately 40 percent of Washington’s 2015 cannabis revenue was cannibalized from preexisting sources. We find that Washington’s current substance taxes, even after accounting for substitution, are on the upward-sloping side of the Laffer curve.

Topics & Concepts

LegalizationCannabisTax revenueEconomicsRevenueLaffer curveConsumption (sociology)Public economicsExciseWineryTax reformLawState income taxWinePolitical scienceFinanceMacroeconomicsGross incomeFood sciencePsychologySocial scienceChemistrySociologyPsychiatryCannabis and Cannabinoid ResearchTaxation and Compliance StudiesGender, Labor, and Family Dynamics