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    Default Unintended consequences of the drug war

    http://mises.org/daily/4971

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    Most people have never really met crystal meth; sure, they talk about it on the news a lot, but how many average Americans know anyone who is a meth user? The drug goes by many names: methylamphetamine, N-methylamphetamine, desoxyephedrine, speed, and — most commonly — meth. Regardless of what it is called, methamphetamine is absolutely one of the most dangerous and addictive drugs on the black market today.
    Methamphetamine has been around since 1893 and to this day is approved by the FDA for treatment of both ADHD and obesity. How can its recent surge in popularity as a recreational drug be explained? Why would anyone choose to use a drug that is widely known, even by its users, to be one of the most dangerous and difficult to quit of all the illegal drugs? It may surprise some readers that economics can provide the best answer to these baffling questions. But before we can understand the economics behind people's decision to use meth, we must first be sure we have been properly introduced to it and its users.
    It may seem strange that the same chemical delivered in tablet form by the millions to Nazi soldiers (talk about your Blitzkrieg) could also be such a popular street drug. The reason it is used "recreationally" is that in higher doses it produces a euphoric reaction that can include increased alertness, energy, enhanced self-esteem, and even increased sex drive — all of which can last up to 12 hours. The inevitable downside includes fatigue and depression. Not surprisingly, the drug is also considered to be highly addictive.
    In order to avoid withdrawal symptoms, some users embark on binges where they consume the drug for days or weeks at a time. This, however, only makes the withdrawal longer and more painful. Long-term users can experience physiological, psychological, and neurological damage that lasts long after the withdrawal period. Long-term effects also include depression, suicide, and heart attacks. A full description of the drug and its effects can be found here.
    One particularly painful and debilitating effect of long-term use of Crystal Meth is known as "meth mouth." This condition involves the degradation of the user's teeth and gums. Prolonged use can result in the discoloration and loss of teeth prematurely. Teeth become disfigured, diseased, and ground down, exposing the nerves. The user's gums also become diseased, further hastening the loss of teeth. Meth mouth is thought to be the result of poor hygiene and diet, combined with the effects of the drug (e.g., dry mouth) and the self-inflicted grinding down of the teeth that users experience. In severe cases, the damage is irreversible. The result is not pretty.
    The total number of meth users is relatively small, but workers in drug-rehab centers, emergency rooms, and morgues are forced to meet this incredibly damaging drug, or its victims, on a near-daily basis. This article's brief introduction to meth, and how it operates, is necessary to ensure that we are all on the same page and fully understand the class of drug with which we are dealing. I'm certain that the reader can now agree with policy makers, law-enforcement officers, public-health experts, drug-legalization advocates, and former users when they say that, in terms of destructive potential, not all drugs are created equal, and meth is in a class unto itself.
    The question is, given that it is so dangerous and destructive, why is crystal meth so popular?


    The deterioration of a methamphetamine user over the course of 10 years


    The answers most often given are related to technology, physiology, and psychology: Technologically, crystal meth is easy to make, using simple production equipment, a recipe that is available for free on the internet, and ingredients available at your local pharmacy. The low technological threshold of meth has resulted in new amateur and professional labs opening across the country and around the world. Physiologically, meth is very addictive. A study published in 2007 found that "Methamphetamine withdrawal is associated with more severe and prolonged depression than is cocaine withdrawal, so patients with withdrawal should be monitored closely for suicidal ideation." Psychologically, meth provides the euphoria that so many people crave.
    This is all true, but it does not explain the popularity of such a harmful and dangerous product. Suppliers of drugs, consumers of drugs, and even drug addicts have long been known to be "rational" as a group — yes, rational, but stick with me. They respond to changes in prices; they respond to quality differentials and to changes in quality. They also respond — rationally — to changes in risk. So if drug users select their drug of choice using a rational decision-making process, what explains this "march to the bottom" and the emergence of meth in illegal drug markets?
    The answer is that crystal meth is a cheap date; it has been referred to as the poor man's cocaine. Cocaine and meth are both stimulants, so it is reasonable to assume that they appeal to the same subset of drug users. During cocaine's heyday, meth was nearly extinct on the illegal market.
    This changed with Reagan's "War on Drugs," which was effective in raising prices for illegal drugs by imposing greater risks and thus higher costs on production, distribution, and consumption. The initial shock of the war on drugs sent black-market entrepreneurs back to the drawing board; they needed to reduce their risk and their costs. What they came back with included highly potent marijuana, crack cocaine, and crystal meth.




    As I promised, economics provides the best explanation for the surge in popularity of meth despite the disproportionate danger of its use. Increased enforcement of drug laws, backed by increased penalties, led to higher prices and decreased availability of preferred recreational drugs such as marijuana and cocaine. High prices and periodic shortages led drug dealers and consumers to find substitutes — ersatz goods that would produce similar results but at a lower cost.
    The scourge of crystal meth is another example of the "potency effect" or what has been called the "iron law of prohibition." When government enacts a prohibition, increases enforcement, or increases penalties on a good such as alcohol or drugs, it inevitably results in substitution to more adulterated, more potent, and more dangerous drugs.
    In the case of crystal meth, authorities have tried to restrict the supply of the basic ingredient, which is a common component in cold medications. They required that such medications be sold in pharmacies from behind the counter and limited to a one-month supply. More recently, some states have required that buyers be tracked electronically to prevent purchasing from multiple pharmacies.



    In response, meth producers have recruited large numbers of intermediaries, including their friends, relatives, college students, and even children and the homeless. These recruits buy the cold medicine and can sell it to the labs for a 500 percent profit. A review by the Associated Press shows that thousands of people are being lured into this drug trade. "Law enforcement was surprised," St. Louis County Sgt. Tom Murley said. "People that normally wouldn't cross the line are willing to do so because they think it's such a sweet deal, and because of the economy."
    Fortunately, in addition to answers and explanations, economics can show us the path away from this now decades-old trend — the trend toward more potent and more dangerous drugs. After all, a certain portion of society will, regardless of legal restrictions and enforcement, choose to use drugs. So the solution is quite simple, really: end the drug war. Less enforcement and lower penalties would reduce the price of marijuana and shift demand from crystal meth back to marijuana, a drug that has few of the problems associated with meth.



    So, crystal meth is being used more because production and distribution of cocaine became more expensive, leading both consumers and producers to switch to cheaper and even worse drugs. There will always be people who want to do drugs, so why the hell are we just making things worse for them?

  2. #2
    Imperial's Avatar Primicerius
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    I don't have problems with Marijuana or anything, but hard drugs like cocaine should be kept illegal.

  3. #3

    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    Quote Originally Posted by Imperial View Post
    I don't have problems with Marijuana or anything, but hard drugs like cocaine should be kept illegal.
    But then, what about your tea/coffee this morning?
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    Azog 150's Avatar Civitate
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    Quote Originally Posted by Imperial View Post
    I don't have problems with Marijuana or anything, but hard drugs like cocaine should be kept illegal.

    And why do you think that?
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    Col. Tartleton's Avatar Comes Limitis
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    Quote Originally Posted by Imperial View Post
    I don't have problems with Marijuana or anything, but hard drugs like cocaine should be kept illegal.
    Why? It's like the best drug ever...
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    Panzerbear's Avatar Praeses
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    I am Libertarian, and therefore, pro-Choice everything. legalize all drugs -- and defeat crime overnight.
    social darvinism will take care of everything else.

    Throw away all your newspapers!
    Most of you are Libertarians, you just havent figured it out yet.

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    Angrychris's Avatar Primicerius
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    You can get crystal meth/cocain substitutes from doctor prescriptions now a days. You have to keep the prison/jail population high and drug users/dealers make up the bulk.

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  8. #8
    Viking Prince's Avatar Horrible(ly cute)
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    Even cigarettes are not completely legal. The government regulates the distribution, who can sell, who may buy, and taxes the living daylights out of the product. Any senario regarding legalization of habit forming substances is not about them being legal, but about them being made a tiny bit more available.

    Crystal meth (the subject drug mentioned in the OP) is simply a result of our ability to manufacture drugs cheaper than nature can grow them. Even with a field and sunlight, there is a cost to growing drugs, preparing them for market, and distribution. Competition with other illegal drugs still will have crystal meth at a competitive advantage. Under any sort of loosening of the rules, the drug companies and the cigarette companies will still hold all aces in the dealt cards. Crystal meth is and will continue to be highly regulated if not outright banned because it is highly addictive and there is a difference between free will as a nonuser and free will as an addict.
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  9. #9
    Denny Crane!'s Avatar Comes Rei Militaris
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    Quote Originally Posted by Viking Prince View Post
    Even cigarettes are not completely legal. The government regulates the distribution, who can sell, who may buy, and taxes the living daylights out of the product. Any senario regarding legalization of habit forming substances is not about them being legal, but about them being made a tiny bit more available.

    Crystal meth (the subject drug mentioned in the OP) is simply a result of our ability to manufacture drugs cheaper than nature can grow them. Even with a field and sunlight, there is a cost to growing drugs, preparing them for market, and distribution. Competition with other illegal drugs still will have crystal meth at a competitive advantage. Under any sort of loosening of the rules, the drug companies and the cigarette companies will still hold all aces in the dealt cards. Crystal meth is and will continue to be highly regulated if not outright banned because it is highly addictive and there is a difference between free will as a nonuser and free will as an addict.
    There are plenty of solutions that do not involve outright illegalisation in fact there are many controlled substances (hundreds of thousands) that aren't illegal but aren't sold in corner shops.

    People, not you, seem to have such a black and white view of drugs. It is THE WAR ON DRUGS or it is heroin in every corner shop. These people have such limited imaginations that it baffles me. For a start the war on drugs is a pejorative agressive term which describes exactly how the authorities treat it, and people like to ignore the fact that before the big agressive push there was little use of hard drugs and it was not a problem for society. It is undeniably a massive problem to society now.

    The fact is trials have been successfully trialed with prescription heroin and crime and usage goes down, people on programs stay on them and the drug cartels are denied that extra income. If these schemes were rolled out world wide then heroin would lose its lucrative nature without long term repeat users and street level pushing would be minimised if not eradicated when people learned that they didn't have to go and rob a house for it. Only addicts would ever go to get it because hell who wants to ruin their lives? It is the drug that people try socially and it is the social aspect that helps keep people addicted as it is pushed on them (because no one likes to ruin their lives alone) and this is something for which there is a wealth of evidence.

    I've never seen any hard evidence whatsoever that the war on drugs has been a good thing or ever even remotely accomplished its goals and the case for keeping any part of it is indefensible. In a time when we have governments who have massive deficits and budget problems it amazes me that we still self destruct ourselves a little bit every day by warring on our own citizens.

    And people wonder why I fart on about anarchism all the time, who wouldn't be cynical after observing the war on drugs.

  10. #10
    Ahlerich's Avatar Praeses
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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    my main concern is that drugs become way to expensive, especially in times of a recession. its pretty much only lawyers and doctores that can afford coke still. this consequence of the drug war is inacceptable and makes me a drug war pacifist.

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    Default Re: Unintended consequences of the drug war

    Quote Originally Posted by Timothy Leary View Post
    So, crystal meth is being used more because production and distribution of cocaine became more expensive, leading both consumers and producers to switch to cheaper and even worse drugs. There will always be people who want to do drugs, so why the hell are we just making things worse for them?

    Well if they all start killing themselves by using worse/deadlier drugs then our problem is solved.

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