Journal article
Does liberalizing cannabis laws increase cannabis use?
J Williams, AL Bretteville-Jensen
Journal of Health Economics | Published : 2014
Abstract
A key question in the ongoing policy debate over cannabis' legal status is whether liberalizing cannabis laws leads to an increase in cannabis use. This paper provides new evidence on the impact of a specific type of liberalization, decriminalization, on initiation into cannabis use. Our identification strategy exploits variation in the timing of cannabis policy reforms and our estimation framework marries a difference-in-difference approach with a discrete time duration model. Our results reveal evidence of both heterogeneity and dynamics in the response of cannabis uptake to decriminalization. Overall, we find that the impact of decriminalization is concentrated amongst minors, who have a ..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank Jan van Ours, Asako Ohinata, Matteo Picchio, Stephen Jenkins, participants of the ISSDP conference in Santa Monica (2010) and ASHEcon 2012 for valuable comments. Jamie Fini provided excellent research assistance. We gratefully acknowledge support from the Australian Research Council; grant number DP0770580.