California marijuana to have 45 percent tax, could fuel black market sales

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2017/10/31/California-marijuana-to-have-45-percent-tax-could-fuel-black-market-sales/4431509498018/?utm_source=sec&utm_campaign=sl&utm_medium=6

Oct. 31 (UPI) -- Marijuana is legal in California, but the state's taxes could be so high that illegal purchases will be more attractive to buyers, according to a report released Monday.

Global credit firm Fitch Ratings said in the report that marijuana taxes in California could reach as high as 45 percent -- and that could put legal sellers at a disadvantage to their illegal competitors.




"High tax rates raise prices in legal markets, reinforcing the price advantage of black markets," the firm said. "California's black markets for cannabis were well established long before its voters legalized cannabis in November 2016 and are expected to dominate post-legalization production."

Californians voted to legalize marijuana for recreational use in 2016 and licenses to grow and distribute the plant will be issued starting Jan. 1. The state will charge sales taxes ranging between 22-24 percent, including a 15 percent excise tax. Additional taxes will vary at the local level, and farmers will have to pay a tax of $9.25 per ounce for marijuana flowers and $2.75 per ounce for leaves.

Of the five states that allow sales of recreational marijuana, only Washington, with a tax of more than 50 percent, has a higher rate than California's. Colorado and Nevada have a 36 percent tax, followed by Alaska and Oregon with 20 percent.

High taxes on legal marijuana have already seen increased black market sales in Colorado.

"I don't know who is buying for recreational use at dispensaries unless it's white, middle-class people and out-of-towners," Rudy Reddog Balles, a Denver community activist, told The New York Times in 2014, soon after the state enacted legal sales of marijuana. "Everyone I know still has the guy on the street that they hook up with."

By July, Colorado had received more than $500 million in marijuana tax revenue since legal sales began in 2014.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2017/10/31/California-marijuana-to-have-45-percent-tax-could-fuel-black-market-sales/4431509498018/?utm_source=sec&utm_campaign=sl&utm_medium=6

Oct. 31 (UPI) -- Marijuana is legal in California, but the state's taxes could be so high that illegal purchases will be more attractive to buyers, according to a report released Monday.

Global credit firm Fitch Ratings said in the report that marijuana taxes in California could reach as high as 45 percent -- and that could put legal sellers at a disadvantage to their illegal competitors.




"High tax rates raise prices in legal markets, reinforcing the price advantage of black markets," the firm said. "California's black markets for cannabis were well established long before its voters legalized cannabis in November 2016 and are expected to dominate post-legalization production."

Californians voted to legalize marijuana for recreational use in 2016 and licenses to grow and distribute the plant will be issued starting Jan. 1. The state will charge sales taxes ranging between 22-24 percent, including a 15 percent excise tax. Additional taxes will vary at the local level, and farmers will have to pay a tax of $9.25 per ounce for marijuana flowers and $2.75 per ounce for leaves.

Of the five states that allow sales of recreational marijuana, only Washington, with a tax of more than 50 percent, has a higher rate than California's. Colorado and Nevada have a 36 percent tax, followed by Alaska and Oregon with 20 percent.

High taxes on legal marijuana have already seen increased black market sales in Colorado.

"I don't know who is buying for recreational use at dispensaries unless it's white, middle-class people and out-of-towners," Rudy Reddog Balles, a Denver community activist, told The New York Times in 2014, soon after the state enacted legal sales of marijuana. "Everyone I know still has the guy on the street that they hook up with."

By July, Colorado had received more than $500 million in marijuana tax revenue since legal sales began in 2014.
Sounds good to me. I'm all for it.
 

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
Sounds good to me. I'm all for it.
Please elaborate why..........as we know most of the taxing burden falls on the lowest of incomes, which is minorities and the sick. Why would you support crushing those two?
You rail every day it seems on injustices of this type, yet you agree with this one?
 

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
so guilt by association is horrible when you are buddying up to holocaust deniers but just fine now?

ok
Why do you feel like suppressing minorities, women and the sick and terminally ill, or will you continue to deflect?
 

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
don't act like you care about minorities or the sick after voting for donald trump you fucking retard.
Where, when, how.....I love how you attack an indigenous minority. Your a virtual hate crime. And a Cop loving Marijuana hater, kind of unusual for this type of site don't you think?

Maybe you can pull out on of your "grow" journals you have never shared???????
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Please elaborate why..........as we know most of the taxing burden falls on the lowest of incomes, which is minorities and the sick. Why would you support crushing those two?
You rail every day it seems on injustices of this type, yet you agree with this one?
If people can get cheaper weed on the black market, then it's just fine with me. It's dumb to set the tax that high but that's what California voted for. If anybody down there has any brains, they will adjust the tax rate down. This isn't rocket science.
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
If people can get cheaper weed on the black market, then it's just fine with me. It's dumb to set the tax that high but that's what California voted for. If anybody down there has any brains, they will adjust the tax rate down. This isn't rocket science.
How much a gram versus legal and illegal growers?
Sounds like pure capitalism too me, which is the American way, like competition for selling a better product at a cheaper price.
Let the best man win
 

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
If people can get cheaper weed on the black market, then it's just fine with me. It's dumb to set the tax that high but that's what California voted for. If anybody down there has any brains, they will adjust the tax rate down. This isn't rocket science.
When have they ever done that, please cite examples now that your backtracking.....and deflecting on paying for more police too....awesome sauce
 

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL

i bet you even had a back co-worker once, trump loving retard.
So you are okay with a 45% tax rate in California that keeps police salaries paid. What else was it your were asking? I thought there might have been a point.....yammer yammer
 
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