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Legalising cannabis could generate 1.5 billion pounds for UK economy, new study finds
Leafie Wednesday 05 Mar 2025 Analysis released by Transform Drug Policy Foundation has shown that that legalising and regulating cannabis for adult non-medical use in the UK could generate up to £1.5 billion in annual net benefits to the Treasury. The report, titled High Returns: The Economic Benefits of UK Cannabis Legalisation, outlines how tax revenue and criminal justice system savings could provide significant economic advantages while creating up to 15,500 full-time jobs across cultivation, manufacturing, retail and ancillary services. According to the research, a mature regulated market could capture up to 80% of the current illegal cannabis market within five years, based on evidence from countries like Canada, where similar reforms have been implemented. Transform’s analysis models three different regulatory approaches. The most lucrative scenario, combining home growing provisions with non-profit associations and a state monopoly on commercial retail, could generate £1.23 billion in tax revenue and retail profits alongside £284 million in criminal justice savings. “For Transform, the economic arguments for the legal regulation of non-medical adult-use cannabis, though significant, are secondary to public health and social justice policy priorities,” the report states. However, it acknowledges that “economic dimensions of the cannabis reform debate are undoubtedly gaining political salience, particularly as governments face growing budgetary pressures.” Criminal justice savings could reach up to £284 million annually, with up to £88 million from reduced policing costs for cannabis-related offences and £167 million from decreased prosecutions. The report highlights wider benefits beyond direct economic impact, including opportunities to repair the historic harms of punitive cannabis enforcement that have disproportionately affected marginalised groups, particularly the Black community. It also points to the potential for safer, responsibly labelled products with quality and dosage controls. Public support for cannabis reform in the UK remains high, a recent YouGov survey found that 55% of Brits support some form of cannabis reform, while only 33% felt it should remain illegal. Legal cannabis markets are expanding globally, with reforms now taking place on every continent. Three models for UK cannabis regulation The report offers a detailed analysis of three distinct regulatory approaches, each with unique economic and social implications. The first model would permit adults to grow cannabis for personal use and access it through regulated non-profit membership-based associations, similar to systems already established in Spain, Uruguay, Germany and Malta. This approach would generate approximately £345 million in tax revenue and create around 7,000 new jobs, while delivering £174 million in criminal justice savings. By year five, this model is projected to capture 45% of the total cannabis market. Its main advantage is lower regulatory costs while avoiding the profit-driven incentives that come with commercial retail. The second model represents a hybrid approach that combines home growing and non-profit associations with regulated commercial retail. This more comprehensive model would allow for both non-profit community-based production and commercial distribution under strict regulatory frameworks. The economic benefits are substantially higher, with projected tax revenues of £1.1 billion, the creation of 15,525 new jobs, and criminal justice savings of £284 million. Market capture would reach approximately 80% by the fifth year. The report suggests this model balances revenue generation with public health safeguards and offers greater opportunities to address the harms of prohibition through social equity programmes, though it warns of risks, including market consolidation and corporate influence over policy priorities. The third model maintains provisions for home growing and non-profit associations but places commercial retail under a state monopoly, similar to systems in some Canadian provinces and US states. This approach would maximise government revenue at approximately £1.23 billion (including retail profits) while creating 15,000 jobs and delivering the same £284 million in criminal justice savings as the second model. The state monopoly approach prioritises public health considerations and prevents market consolidation, though at the cost of potentially limiting market competition and innovation. All three models assume a five-year implementation period and would be regulated in accordance with Transform’s best practice guidelines, with no international trade permitted in the initial phase. “There are many powerful arguments for ending the generational failure and injustice of cannabis prohibition, but the economic arguments have particular salience in the current political debate,” said Steve Rolles, who co-authored the study with Ester Kincova. “£1.5 billion in annual income could fund 18 million more GP appointments, free school meals for all the UK primary schools, or reverse the cut in winter fuel payments for pensioners. It’s long past time for the UK Government to grow up, deal with reality, and begin an adult debate on how legalisation and regulation of cannabis can deliver for the UK.” The report was made possible thanks to Transform’s ongoing crowdfunding campaign to legalise cannabis in the UK. https://www.leafie.co.uk/news/legalising-cannabis-1-5-billion-uk-economy/
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