As the Reserve Bank meets to consider how much damage it has inflicted on the economy in unnecessary and ideologically motivated interest rate hikes, and whether more futile harm is warranted, other policymakers are dealing with a very specific sticky inflation problem.
Australians have long paid some of the world’s highest prices for cocaine — a product almost entirely imported into the nation’s market, one marked by highly anti-competitive behaviour by quite literal cartels.
Like inflation of other goods and services, high prices come with a range of damaging economic and social impacts — distorting investment decisions, incentivising monopolistic behaviour by market participants, and amplifying the negative externalities of the product’s use, like the (inevitably “brazen“) murder of competitors.
Like the Reserve Bank, however, policymakers and the media are blaming high prices on consumer demand instead of supply and competition. “Sydney has Australia’s highest house prices and is the nation’s cocaine capital,” The Sydney Morning Herald lamented yesterday. “Now, like house prices, the drug is more expensive in Sydney than in Europe. Only Saudi Arabia, where a drug conviction will get you beheaded, has higher prices for illicit drugs.”
Unlike housing, however, Nine is happy to blame consumers for the high price of cocaine. “Sydney’s dark addiction to cocaine is a curious need. We know it harms, yet celebrate the drug in film and song,” referring to its perception as a “party” drug of choice for “affluent members of society and high-profile members of the entertainment industry”.
The scolding of “affluent” consumers has echoes of the brief flurry of criticism of cashed-up, mortgage-less seniors whose continued holidaying and spending were held to be forcing the RBA to increase interest rates last year at the expense of the rest of us doing it tough — rather than the bigger problem of gouging by large companies.
To be fair to Nine, it has taken its cue from a senior policymaker, NSW crime commissioner Michael Barnes, who told the outlet that “upper-middle-class young people wearing business clothes and drinking red wine think it’s great to post pictures of people doing lines”. Notice the element of class that pervades this portrayal — real Aussies use locally manufactured ice; it’s only affluent, business-suit-wearing, upper-middle-class people who use imported cocaine. It’s like beer drinking vs sipping red wine.
Such people were “blind to the broader societal consequences of their consumption”, according to the article. Celebrities and football players were also to blame. “It seems to me it’s still glamorised,” Barnes said, calling for “a whole community response”. That sounds a lot like a central banker scolding the community that if only they’d stop spending so much, they could cut interest rates. It is also likely to be about as effective.
As we know, the primary cause of the high price of cocaine is government regulation, which forces supply chains to operate through illegal, and therefore much more expensive and unreliable, channels, and leaves distribution and retailing in the hands of a market that must conduct its own form of regulation in the absence of government regulation. Rather than scolding and abusing consumers, removing the regulatory impediments to supply is the most effective way to bring cocaine prices down and minimise the negative externalities of the product.
Importation, distribution and retailing could then be undertaken by legitimate companies that can be regulated and taxed in a way that is currently unavailable. Arguably, there would be a considerable reduction in the number of “brazen” homicides on Sydney streets if commercial disputes over cocaine supply were dealt with in the Federal Court.
This isn’t just an argument for legalising drugs, the logic of which is clear to everyone but major political parties and the media. Whether ice, pot, cocaine or heroin is your illicit drug of choice, the scolding of consumers to adhere to society’s arbitrary list of which drug is prohibited and which isn’t is a classic case of treating the symptoms rather than the cause.
Ever since cannabis was cultivated 10,000 years ago, humanity has consumed psychoactive drugs, for a variety of reasons. In 21st-century Western economies — marked by economic precarity, intergenerational inequity, lack of access to housing, the political and economic dominance of corporations and a refusal of the governing class to seriously address the climate catastrophe — the consumption of drugs is more than ever a rational choice to deal with the psychological toll of living under a deeply flawed economic and political system.
Lecturing people to stop consuming them isn’t merely fatuous; it’s profoundly ironic.
Bernard Keane uses codeine, caffeine and alcohol. He has, sadly, never used cocaine or any other illicit drug.
Yes, but the list of those who want to keep the current insanity going is incomplete. The strongest and most effective supporters of the absurd War on Drugs are those who are making vast fortunes from it, all free of tax. Of course they too see the logic of legalising drugs, and that is why they adamantly oppose it. The cartels who run the illegal drug trade would do just about anything to protect themselves from the devastating consequences of legalisation and regulation, although there might just be a possibility of bringing them on board if they are allowed to dominate the legalised trade as much as they do the current illegal trade.
Another lobby with similar reasons for being vehemently opposed to legalisation are all those with careers that exist only because of the War on Drugs; all those law enforcement agencies that get their status and funding from ensuring everything about illegal drugs gets worse. In effect, the drug cartels and the law enforcement agencies are partners.
Let us not forget certain media who have run profitable scare campaigns on legalization for decades, and who have sold a lot of papers or got net hits on the subject. Where every powerful, logical, ethical case made for legalization is met with the three-word scream: ‘Drugs! Your children!‘, over and over again. And, sadly, in this country where critical thinking isn’t exactly encouraged by the aforesaid media, the tactic works every time, and helps erase many a political enemy.
Actually, the pharmaceutical lobby is quite strong in this one, not only would certain drugs be less nessecary, they can also not make a play for ‘safe’ synthetic equivalents.
I too am suspicious of the motives of big pharma in all its activities.
I was talking to some Californians last year. I asked about the legal cannabis they can purchase in California. One said he regularly enjoyed a sugar-free cannabis gummy (sorta jelly-baby) instead of wine or G&T’s (no calories) For all of the USA’s problems, on this issue you have to say they have a more mature attitude to drug use than we do.
I also can’t understand why, if MDMA is your drug of choice, that grown adults can’t freely buy it. But at the moment, those who want to enjoy it are patronisingly told NO. In Victoria, they aren’t even allowed to find out if the illegal product they’ve purchased which purports to be MDMA is indeed MDMA, and if it is a safe level of dosage. Wonderful young people die because some think they have they the right to tell others what they can or can’t imbibe in. Surely if the risks to health are about the same as alcohol, no such moral or ethical right exists.
Keith Richard is living proof that good-grade heroin isn’t that bad for you. Why not just give it to the addicts with the shooting up gear at the safe injecting room? THe cost would be minimal and look at the savings to be made in ambulance call outs, emergency treatment, policing and customs, the courts, and household insurance premiums.
Drugs like cocaine and meth have much greater health effects, on the brain and the heart just to start with, so making them legally available is far more problematic, but we do need to have a mature discussion about itdoing that.
The fact that I can knock myself out, legally and without sanction, 24/7 on beer and vino, but others, who lean towards different ways of achieving an altered mental state risk being labelled criminals, and death from consuming illegal products, defies logic.
Exactly. And that used to be the policy, at least up to a point. A pharmacist I knew in the UK used to supply clean pharmaceutical-grade heroin to addicts who obtained their prescriptions from their doctors. In his experience they were able to hold down jobs, live with their familes and lead near-enough normal healthy lives without bothering anyone. The cost of the drugs was negligible. Then Thatcher signed on to the big moral panic and the War on Drugs, and it all went to hell; unless you were dealing illegal heroin, in which case it was suddenly happy days, super profits and time to put on the hard sell.
Small point – it was in 1971, almost a decade before the Milk Snatcher was even Secretary for Education under the Grocer, that the UK abandoned its sane policy of GP prescribed heroin (as well as Merck cocaine ampoules, morphine and Methedrine among other substances, incl. tincture of cannabis) under pressure from the Benighted States which refused to approve yet another IMF ‘loan’ to tide Britain over yet another Sterling crisis in 1970.
Prior to that catastrophic capitulation there were fewer than 10,000 registered addicts (mostly WWII vets, doctors, nurses & dentists) and virtually no black market – once the legislation was passed, Dixon St (Soho) tooled-up seemingly overnight and became one of the most profitable markets in the country.
Fun fact – the current guestimate (no register!!) of junkies in the UK is STB 300-500,000, with twice that number of casual users of coke & smack.
Job done.
Fair enough, that date for the switch in UK policy makes sense given it was Nixon who decided not just to send the USA in this direction, he also required the rest of the world to follow, so far the USA’s influence would allow. Thatcher and Reagan were just continuing and reinforcing it; although that was never a bar to the CIA running clandestine drugs for its own purposes.
Nixon’s advisor on this policy was John Erlichman, who many years later said (quoted by journalist Dan Baum)
“You want to know what this was really all about?… The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then cr—minalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news… Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.
Yep SSR, so just like so many of us are functioning alcoholics, you can be a functioning smack-head too. Either way, you might end up lying in your own vomit “in the gutter”, or you might not. I seriously believe in the state intevening on individual rights. Yes you can ride a motor bike, but you must wear a helmet, cos I’m not prepared to pay tax to support you with your aquired brain injury. But, if I’m allowed to drink alcohol with all the potential for health problems and other (potentially) nasty stuff that’ll cost the taxpayer, then you’re allowed to do the equivalent with (approved) horse tranquilisers, cane toad skins, pharmaceuticals, fungi, and botanicals or whatever, provided, on average, they don’t represent a significantly greater cost than alcohol to the taxpayer.
By the way SSR, your acronym is only one letter away from Selective Serotin Reuptake Inhibitor (happy pills). Is it pure accident? Or is there no “I” in Sinking Ship Rat because you play for the team?
Presumably, as a Selective Serotin Reuptake Inhibitor is a happy pill (anti-depressant), then when lacking the inhibitor function it would be more of a misery pill or depressant. It is for others to judge, I neither confirm nor deny…
“legalising drugs, the logic of which is clear to everyone but major political parties and the media” … and all the public health experts in the state police unions, of course …
Hey, remember how much we’re supposed to respect epidemiologists?
I wonder how many folks even knew they were a thing before covid.
I think enough research has been done into the Portuguese 20+ years experiment to conclude that the benefits of decriminalisation of drugs across the board far outweigh the harms. But don’t read most, especially American, MSM opinion pieces about it, read the copious serious research papers online. Do I think it will happen here, not a chance. Neither lab or libs have the smarts or guts to go anywhere near it.
Sounds like an opportunity to revive Australia’s manufacturing industry.