Healthcare Policy, 19(3) February 2024: 29-32.doi:10.12927/hcpol.2024.27263
Discussion and Debate
Commentary: The Conflict Between Protecting Public Health and Raising Tax Revenue
Abstract
When Canada created a legal market for cannabis, it gave priority to public health by restricting marketing using branding and promotion via social and other media sources. These restrictions to protect the public from harmful use are under increasing pressure from the legal cannabis industry, which claims that they prevent them from outcompeting and replacing the illicit market. Public health advocates are reasonably concerned that these restrictions will not hold given our experience with alcohol, tobacco and gambling where governments' fiscal dependence on tax revenue favours the liberalization of regulation.
This article is for subscribers only.
To view the entire article, sign in if you are a subscriber. Or select one of the options below.
Personal Subscriber? Sign In
Please note: To register for an event you must sign-in as an individual or create a personal Longwood's account. Thank you.
Comments
Be the first to comment on this!
You must sign in to comment Sign In or Create an Account to add comments
Related Content
Healthcare Quarterly
Healthcare and Climate Change: Do No Harm
Healthcare Quarterly
HealthcarePapers
Why UFI Nudges Will Get Stuck in the Policy Process