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Cannabis economy brings in £11bn
Guardian Unlimited Observer

Posted on 02/15/2003 1:18:22 PM PST by toothless

Cannabis economy brings in £11bn

Cannabis smokers just want to stay on the sofa and snack, spending hours engrossed in home entertainment. Red Bull and smoothies, 'Munchie' snacks such as Mars bars and Haribo jellies. Pizza chains. Video stores. Games consoles. Multichannel TV. And what scares them... Shiny, noisy places with too many choices such as Starbucks and McDonald's High-alcohol drinks and strong lagers such as Stella Artois Pubs with bouncers on the door: Businesses alerted to huge profits as study shows dope users have money to burn

Ben Summerskill Sunday February 2, 2003 The Observer

The stock market is faltering and house prices are on the edge of a precipice. Could cannabis smokers be the unlikely saviours of the British economy?

A major new study is being used to advise well known household and high-street companies about the gains and losses they face as cannabis smoking becomes commonplace.

Research has revealed that Britain's 'cannabis economy' is worth £5 billion a year in sales alone.

Now it has been discovered that a further £6bn of consumer expenditure each year is closely linked to the growing cannabis-users' market.

'Young people between 15 and 30 are very trend-conscious and aspirational,' said Andy Davidson, who commissioned the study for The Research Business International, trend analysts who tracked the spending habits of young people for six months.The study found that cannabis users spend an average of £20 on products that accompany their drug use each time they smoke.

Because smoking cannabis heightens appetite, users are providing a £120 million weekly windfall to a string of takeaway food suppliers, such as Domino and Pizza Hut, and manufacturers of 'munchie' products such as Mars bars and Haribo jellies.

Video suppliers and manufacturers of home entertainments such as PlayStation and Nintendo GameCube are also benefiting from the need of a generation of users to keep themselves occupied at home while their drug of choice remains unlawful.

'Some of these brands benefit at the moment,' said Davidson, 'but if people become more willing to smoke in public when the law is relaxed next year, they may be hit.'

The Government has announced that cannabis will be 'downgraded' to a class C drug next summer making arrest and prosecution for possession less likely. The move follows a controversial experiment in Lambeth, south London, where police attention focused on hard drug users and suppliers rather than cannabis smokers.

'Cannabis users also have discretionary expenditure of tens of millions of pounds each week on places to meet and eat,' said Davidson. 'They don't like shiny, noisy environments with lots of choices such as McDonald's. On the whole, they prefer somewhere with low-key lighting and a straightforward menu.

'And they don't like venues solely devoted to heavy drinking. That doesn't mean that they won't still go out for a big night once a week, but they avoid the sort of pubs that have heavy bouncers on the door.' Many cannabis users also avoid high alcohol drinks, even strong lagers.

'Thursday is now my biggest night,' reported a 22-year old woman from London. 'I hate Saturday, it's full of idiots, it's expensive. That's when I love to stay at home and smoke [cannabis].'

'I don't visit big chain bars any more,' said Anthony Green, a student from Leicester. 'They're very intolerant of anything that's outside their obvious remit of drinking and pulling.

'When we use cannabis at home, there are some things we always consume at the same time. Red Bull or smoothies, for example, and takeaway food. There's a sort of conspiracy between consumers and retailers nowadays. You know why you buy these things and they know why you're buying these things, but no one says anything.'

Drug use may even affect radio and TV scheduling in future, the research suggests. A typical 24-year old male admitted: 'I've started taking much more interest in the Discovery Channel. Cannabis really gets you thinking deeply about things.'

Government research has already confirmed that more than 15 million people in Britain have tried cannabis. There are six million regular users, more people than attend church, play Sunday league football or go jogging. TRBI's Project Edge is the first study which has openly monitored cannabis use for commercial, rather than medical, purposes.

Tobacco companies have worked secretly for years on trials of cannabis cigarettes, in spite of the fact that their scientists working on the projects risk arrest for drug possession.

However, manufacturers such as Imperial Tobacco still insist that their 'King Size' Rizla cigarette papers are intended solely for making handmade cigarettes rather than rolling joints.

Carl Ratcliff of advertising agency TBWA said: 'As cannabis gets closer to decriminalisation, you'll see more brands recognising that through their advertising. It won't be explicit, but will be heavily implicit in terms of the signs and symbols that they use.'

'It's no longer a moral issue,' said Davidson. 'Businesses targeting the youth market can no longer ignore the fact that almost half of their customer base is getting stoned every day. They need to make specific projections about how that affects them.'


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: alreadysaid10000x; boorrring; gosmokeadooby; highasakite; sameoldsameold; stoned; stonedstoner; stoner; stonerstoned; wasted; waxed; wodcrapola; wodlist; yawn; yetanotherwodthread

1 posted on 02/15/2003 1:18:22 PM PST by toothless
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To: *Wod_list
"Prohibition will work great injury to the cause of
temperance. It is a species of intemperance within
itself, for it goes beyond the bounds of reason in
that it attempts to control a man's appetite by
legislation, and makes a crime out of things that are
not crimes. A Prohibition law strikes a blow at the
very principles upon which our government was
founded."
Abraham Lincoln (1809-65), U.S. President.
Speech, 18 Dec. 1840, to Illinois House of
Representatives

"The prestige of government has undoubtedly been
lowered considerably by the prohibition law. For
nothing is more destructive of respect for the
government and the law of the land than passing laws
which cannot be enforced. It is an open secret that
the dangerous increase of crime in this country is
closely connected with this."
Albert Einstein, "My First Impression of the U.S.A.",
1921

"There is nothing in the U.S. Constitution that
authorizes the federal government to wage war against
the citizens of the United States, no matter how
well-meaning the intent. The Bill of Rights means just
as much today, as it did on the day it was written.
And its protections are just as valid and just as
important to freedom today, as they were to our
Founders two hundred years ago. The danger of the drug
war is that it erodes away those rights. Once the
fourth amendment is meaningless, it's just that much
easier to erode away the first and then the second,
etc. Soon we'll have no rights at all. " Jim Robinson,
5/9/01 155

"I am so tired of all the arguments for and against
legalizing. It should be legal because this is
America. People that claim anything else should never
be allowed to claim they value freedom and liberty
without being laughed at in the face."

59 posted on 02/14/2003 2:29 PM EST by ks2papa (I Love
Freedom More Than You)
2 posted on 02/15/2003 1:19:33 PM PST by toothless
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To: toothless
And this from the BBC: "Trade on the Cannabis Market was vigorous today in world markets in NYC, London, Rome, San Francisco, Paris and elsewhere concurrent with anti-American demonstrations protesting America's move to disarm Saddam Hussein."
3 posted on 02/15/2003 1:40:25 PM PST by thegreatbeast (Quid lucrum istic mihi est?)
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To: toothless
Without commenting one way or another on the subject of legalization or de-criminalization of drugs, the article is based on a misunderstanding of economics.

The basis of economics is, essentially, creation. Creative work creates wealth. Businesses which simply transfer money from one hand to another certainly can enrich the individual on the receiving end of the transaction, but as nothing new has been created, there is no new wealth.

This is the problem with, for example, economies that seek to base themselves on tourism. It certainly enriches a few developers, but for the society as a whole, it does nothing. Likewise money generated by vice, or any of a number of other businesses. They are the equivalent of empty calories in a diet, like sugar-cereal. The body can afford a certain amount, if it is otherwise getting what it needs, but a diet based on sugar-cereal, and an economy based on unproductive businesses, is doomed to a dead-end.
4 posted on 02/15/2003 2:28:21 PM PST by marron
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To: toothless
Well, england is now gone done the tubes it seems. Accepting of this crap goes hand in hand with 'peace protesting' and all the other assorted liberal garbage.

5 posted on 02/15/2003 2:33:03 PM PST by Monty22
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To: marron
What? The article is about stoners buying Food and video games to pass the time while contributing to terrorism (aka smoking pot).

The food is created. The video games are created. Heck, even the pot is created.
6 posted on 02/15/2003 2:47:17 PM PST by toothless
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To: toothless
Nothing new is created. Empty calories. An economy can stand a certain amount of this, but there is no wealth created.

Its like Las Vegas. Money changes hands. Some folks enjoy the experience. In an economy the size of ours, it probably does little harm. But don't kid yourself, no wealth is created.
7 posted on 02/15/2003 2:59:18 PM PST by marron
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To: toothless
Cannabis really gets you thinking deeply about things.

I think I think, therefore I think....i think....

8 posted on 02/15/2003 4:31:50 PM PST by mcsparkie
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To: Monty22
I think you've mistaken Liberty with 'liberal'.
9 posted on 02/15/2003 8:08:43 PM PST by Darheel (Visit the strange and wonderful.)
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