From a tax perspective, Ohio’s November marijuana Initiative may be the worst plan ever to reach the ballot. It caps tax rates forever, by Constitutional amendment. (Another objection is that it channels all the new wealth directly to its millionaire funders.)
But the Ohio proposal contains a restriction on home growing that I don’t remember seeing in such a prominent proposal. Home growing is a threat to the millionaires who would seize all commercial growing rights for themselves. So the proposal makes home growers get licenses. But the silver lining for tax enforcement is that licenses will make it harder for home growers to break the rules and start selling in commerce, in competition with the legal, taxed market. If you want a tight tax system, licensing home growers would be part of the plan. Continue reading “No home growing w/o license”
Taxation in Colonial America, by Alvin Rabushka, mentions the Virginia liquor duty of 1691, which provided full duty for most liquor, a 50-percent reduction for liquor brought in on “ships owned in Virginia in which the importer had an interest,” and complete exemption for liquor brought in on ships made in Virgina. 