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DrugReporter

How Will the Economic Crisis Impact Drug Use?

By Tony Newman, AlterNet. Posted October 2, 2008.


Drug consumption probably won't go anywhere -- just our patterns of how we use them.
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I know a lot about drugs and the drug war, both personally and professionally. Drugs have had, at alternating times, a positive and a detrimental impact on my life. I have laughed, relaxed and found inspiration while intoxicated. I have also struggled, fought and become despondent because of my addiction to drugs (think cigarettes).

I have spent the last eight years working at the Drug Policy Alliance, an organization working to reform drug laws. With the economic crisis in the United States dominating the news, I find myself wondering what the impact will be on people's drug use and our country's drug policies. Here are some of my reflections on these uncertain and stressful times and how my fellow Americans' drug use may be affected.

People Use Drugs for Joy and Pain, in Good Times and Bad

The New York Times Style Section had a story on September 21st about the bars on Wall Street being packed during the crazy ups and downs of the last couple of weeks. One man was quoted as saying that he and his friends came to drink when something great happened or when something terrible happened. Basically, people drink to celebrate the good and drown out the bad. People are losing their homes, their jobs and their life-savings. I have to believe that the fear and anxiety being felt by so many will lead to increased use of alcohol and other drugs to calm fears or numb pain.

We Will Likely Continue or Increase Some Drug Use and Give up Others

With people struggling to pay the bills, most of us will have to make some sacrifices and cut back on some of our expenses. For many of us, our drugs will not be one of the items cut from our lives. There have been stories about alcohol and cigarette sales holding strong, even in bad times. Many of us will still have our vodka sodas or wine, but we will drink them at home instead of paying triple the price for a drink at the local bar.

While some people feel dependent on their drugs, others who use drugs more recreationally may curb some of their drug use. I have been to spots in New York where people are out on the town and using cocaine. Some people may hold off on dropping 50 bucks for a drug they could take or leave. Some people who only smoke cigarettes socially ("only when I drink"), may stop paying nine bucks for a pack of smokes. For others, cigarettes would be purchased at any cost.

Getting Your Drugs from the Pharmacy or the Street

Despite a $40 billion-a-year "war on drugs" and political speeches about a "drug-free society," our society is swimming in drugs: cigarettes, sugar, alcohol, marijuana, Prozac, Ritalin, Viagra, steroids and caffeine. The vast majority of Americans use drugs on a regular basis. Some people get their sleeping pills or uppers at a pharmacy. Others get them on the street. If more and more people lose jobs and/or health insurance we may see a shift from pharmacy drugs to illicit drugs. Alcohol or marijuana may be a cheaper sleeping aid or anti-anxiety drugs than their prescribed competitors.

Will the Budget Crisis Lead to Smarter and More Cost-Effective Drug Policy?

There are reasons for hope and concern when it comes to our elected officials advocating for cost-effective and money-saving drug policy strategies during the budget crisis. The fear is that treatment and prevention programs will continue to be cut as states look for ways to balance their budgets. On the flip side, states can save millions of dollars by implementing and funding treatment instead of incarceration for nonviolent drug offenders. "Tough on Crime" rhetoric is cheap, but paying $40,000 per person to lock someone in a cage is not. It could be a win-win solution for states to offer treatment instead of jail for those struggling with addiction. This policy would save money and lives. Hopefully the economic savings will get our leaders to do what they already should have been doing, treat substance abuse as a public health issue instead of criminal justice one.

Bottom Line: Drugs Aren't Going Anywhere

The drug war has been waged over the last 30 years, during good economic times and bad. Currently we have 500,000 people behind bars on drug charges. Despite decades of war, incarceration rates and billions of dollars spent, drugs are as plentiful as ever and easily accessible. We have to accept that drugs have been around for thousands of years and will be here for thousands more. We need to educate people about the possible harm from drug use, offer compassion and treatment to people who have problems, and leave in peace the people who are causing harm to no one.

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See more stories tagged with: drugs, drug use, economic crisis

Tony Newman is communications director for the Drug Policy Alliance.

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just from my personal perspective,
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Oct 2, 2008 7:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the guys who were slinging at the other end oif my street have been gone for almost a year because their customer pool dried up.

Detroit area, btw.

jdfu!

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Remember what Freewheelin' Franklin says!
Posted by: bornxeyed on Oct 2, 2008 9:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Drugs will get you through times of no money better then money will get you through times of no drugs!"

Oh, and Keed Spills
Um, Skeed Pills,
Um, Skill peeds

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Author, what drugs are you on?
Posted by: bornxeyed on Oct 3, 2008 8:01 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...marijuana may be a cheaper sleeping aid or anti-anxiety drugs than their prescribed competitors.


Marijuana, Author? Marijuana? A plant with a street value of $400/oz will replace Ambien in a recession?

Where do you get your pot? And will you be sharing?

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My analysis
Posted by: Malkavian on Oct 4, 2008 6:48 AM   
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Drug use - or rather the demand for them - will increase during times of crisis, war and so on. More people are depressed, fearful and mentally unstable through such periods. If such a crisis is coupled with more leisure (as unemployment causes) people can take more drugs without having to worry about headaches and reduced job performance next day.

On the other hand a crisis may lead to less affluence, and affluence often determines the level of drug use.

Including all drugs in the analysis I predict drug use will rise as a whole.

Looking at the specific drugs I predict there will be a shift in the direction of alcohol, pot, morphine, heroin and other fairly affordable drugs that numbs emotional pain. Exotic psychedelics will be less sought after.

The economic pressures will also spur an increase in compact, high-potency products. So if people thought they'd seen the last of crack-cocaine and meth they better think again. These products will be encouraged by the economic laws of prohibition.

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bohemianfarmerwoman
Posted by: bohemianfarmerwoman on Oct 4, 2008 7:50 AM   
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Oh....trust me, the underground economy will flourish. Marijuana farming, already quite popular and probably THE number one cash crop in this country, will be grown in ever increasing amount. It is as easy to grow as a tomato plant, extremely hardy, can be grown sucessfully indoor and out, and can be grown with all kinds of fancy and high tech techniques, or in extremely simple and primitive ways. I predict the cost of domestically grown and locally available pot, will up availablity, and lower price......and one can always grow ones own, in an unused closet. With these tough economic times, I think more people will turn towards this simple unprocessed herb and away from the more expensive, processed (and thus subject to dangerous additives to cut purity and increase profit) street drugs. Also a need for additional cash to weather tough economic times, will cause people with a bit of land or unused area indoors, will continue to encourage more people to grow, and keep money circulating locally, as people will use cash to purchase food, gas, frequent local stores. The trend to "buy locally" is here to stay, as transportation costs soars, and unfolding scandals break about tainted ingredients from far away countries (like China), continue to find their way into our food supply (chocolate in this case)"Eat locally", is being followed by "smoke locally". Why pay upwards of $400 an oz. from some shady dealer, when you can go next door and pay a fourth of that for some respectable "dirt weed" from the local organic grower. We can't afford steak anymore.

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ahha
Posted by: tRANIS on Oct 7, 2008 7:44 AM   
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LOL
Exactly!

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Brenda Winters
Posted by: brenniewinters on Oct 7, 2008 1:48 PM   
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Bologna! Who really cares? The upper classes ship in into the countries and their kids get hooked and die. Good enough. Remeber Freedom of Speech?

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Brenda Winters
Posted by: brenniewinters on Oct 7, 2008 1:59 PM   
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Cocaine has been around a LONG time and so has fermented grapes and grain, ie; NOAH. Not starting them in the first place as a child is a learned behavior. I was taught never to use a needle/ heroin by my grandmother KEZIA WEAVER BARNES when only age 4. She was older than most grandmothers. Wise beyond most people even with only a sixth grad education. I became a Nurse. So many doctors and nurses are tempted to do their patient's drugs. Then who suffers? Yes, The cancer patient with unberable pain.

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My prediction is that weed prices will drop.
Posted by: IndyCA on Oct 9, 2008 10:50 AM   
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There was a government study that found that the market is so saturated with a surplus of cannabis that prices may drop. This relates to the budget crisis because people may be more interested in selling weed on the side to pick up some extra cash. Combine that with less people eager to pay $20 a gram when they are tight on cash and a price drop can be expected. On top of all that alcohol, beer specifically will be more expensive due to excise taxes etc. and with the case of beer a hops shortage. We could see cannabis become a more economical intoxicant than its legal, more harmful alternative.

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