!!Super Happy Yay!!. Ahem. Sorry about that, it just sorta slipped out. Now:
What effect, if any, would the legalization of recreational drugs on a national or international
level have on the world economy? Could it get us out of the aftermath of the Moneypocalypse1?
I'm uncertain whether tax income from legalization of the drugs that happen to be illegal at present would be enough to make up for the loss in income from fines, seizures and the CIA drug trade. Source 1 Source 2 Source 3
That aside, I would be in favor.
Those are all indeed good points, especially about the asset seizure
1. However, I would argue that it works on the assumption that the money acquired from seizures comes from nowhere, i.e. because the owners of the assets are criminals and therefore operate in the black market, they aren't contributing to the US economy
2. Not that this really matters in practical black market terms, as risk to the seller (as well as greed and all that good stuff) is a factor in the price. That said, I would argue that while direct taxes from now-legalized narcotic sales (even including the likely price crash form the removal of various risks (i.e. rivals shooting you in the face, cops Seizing your lootz) might not be too high at first, as the people found their way around the new market there would be a strong potential for growth. Plus, the fact that you could scrap entirely the DEA would certainly mean a few savings for the treasury.
1. Without getting too of topic, there are quite a few cases where various law enforcement agencies in the US have deliberately targeted "suspects" with easily salable assets to fill budget holes, even going so far as to plant evidence to secure a conviction and therefore a seizure. I apologize for the lack of sources in this post, I've been studying for about 14.5 hours and my brain-chi is too low to use my flying-shadow-fire-crane google-fu techniques.
2. I remember reading a bunch of essays about three years ago that claimed that the black market makes up roughly 11% of the overall US economy, with about 7 of the 11% being drugs (the rest is stuff like illegal migrant workers, arms sales, people trafficking etc). One of the essays focused on the fact that cannabis (I refuse to say Mary Jane in Spanish every time I want to mention this) was actually the largest cash crop grown in California. Sadly, my advanced state of impending brain coma leaves me unable to find facts to back this up. If anyone can oblige and feels like it (or can provide something completely contradictory to what I said), please do.