The Agenda with Steve Paikin (Audio) - Cannabis in Canada: What's Changed Since Legalization?
Episode Date: September 19, 2024Nearly six years after cannabis was legalized by the federal government, issues remain with how pot is regulated in Canada. The Agenda explores several facets of legalization, including whether consum...ers have enough information about the harms and benefits of cannabis, gaps that still exist with respect to pardons and why cannabis-related health research has fallen behind. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Legalizing pot was supposed to be a boon for businesses and deal a blow to the black market.
So how did we go from pot shops on every corner to high-profile bankruptcies?
There's a similar story with hoped-for research on medical cannabis that hasn't quite materialized as expected.
With us now to consider such realignments six years on. Let's welcome James McKillop. He's a professor at McMaster University
and director of the Michael G. DeGroote Center
for Medicinal Cannabis Research,
which is a partnership between McMaster
and St. Joseph's Healthcare in Hamilton.
And Ranjiv Dhillon, he's a partner
at the law firm McCarthy Tetro.
Good to have both of you guys in those chairs
for this discussion.
I wanna start with a chart.
Let's just give people a sense about how
Canadian cannabis sales have sort of tapered off
over the years.
And for those listening on podcast,
I'll just describe what we're seeing here,
which is essentially a bar graph
that starts in April of 2023
and fast forwards to March of 2024.
And sales kind of hit a peak in the fall
and winter of 2023, but since then have dipped.
And I guess I want to know, Ranj, for starters, how come?
I think when we had legalization,
we had a big conversion of people
that were in the black market to the legal market.
And so the uptick numbers were absolutely massive.
And if you sort of follow that graph along,
you would think they would keep going up.
But as people have moved in from the illicit to the legal market at
Some point there's a natural sort of plateauing and we're probably in around there now
You know the good news is the industry is still big
It's a five billion dollar plus industry that that's just a legal side of it. The legal side is five billion a year
That's right. Yeah, that's right
And the view is hard to know because it's illicit obviously
But 30 to 40 percent of all cannabis sales in Canada
are still in the black market.
So there's still a very substantial black market out there.
The legalization of marijuana opened, I guess,
the doors to your organization to start doing some research.
Tell us how that happened.
That's right.
So in around 2016, we started seeing the need for more research on medical cannabis
We saw that there had been over the past few years a more than
4,000 percent increase in the number of people who had had who had obtained
Authorizations for medical cannabis, but the evidence wasn't the basis for that. It was just greater access
So we thought there was a real need to do more clinical trials, so really asked the tough question, does cannabis work?
And that was the creation of the DeGroote Center
for medicinal cannabis research.
Does cannabis work to do what?
That's the $64,000 question.
So it is believed to be helpful
for a very long list of conditions,
and what we wanted to do is to really target
the ones that are at the top of the list,
in particular chronic pain, sleep disorders,
and mental health conditions.
And those have been the top priorities.
How much more do you know today than you did six years ago?
Well, Steve, I wish I could tell you that we've had
a transformative impact, but the reality is
it has been extremely challenging to do clinical trials
on medical cannabis in Canada.
We thought that the momentum around legalization
would really greenlight capacity and infrastructure
around doing clinical trials.
But the reality is the Cannabis Act regulations
make it very, very difficult to do trials.
We have successfully launched some pilot trials,
which are the precursors to the major trials.
But those were labors of incredible love
from investigators because they took so much work.
And other projects have simply foundered.
And we've even had investigators who've
had to give back grant money because they weren't
able to get through the regulatory burdens
of getting the trials launched.
Hmm.
OK, Renj, back to you on the business side of things.
Here we are, six years in since legalization.
What are the biggest challenges that the business side
of this equation feels at the moment?
Yeah, I mean, look, we've already touched
on the black mark a little bit.
I would say the biggest issue is the taxation.
The excise taxes are very, very onerous on this.
Six years ago, when this came into play,
the view was that things
would sell for about ten dollars a gram and so the excise taxes were based on
the greater of one dollar and ten percent and so if you're selling at ten
dollars fine it's a ten percent tax but those numbers have come down we've had
seen price compression so now you're seeing sales at three dollars four
dollars so that ten percent tax again it's the greater of $1 or 10%,
is now a 25% tax, a 33% tax.
Also, they didn't lower the percent?
No, they haven't.
Same percent.
OK.
Exactly.
And so the licensed producers have complained about this
quite a lot.
So far, it's fallen on deaf ears.
Is it a huge moneymaker for the province of Ontario?
It's a huge moneymaker for the government as a whole.
So I'll talk about it at a federal level
and at a provincial level.
But excise duties in Canada for beer and wine combined
were substantially less than for cannabis.
So cannabis was approximately $865 million
for fiscal 2022 to 2023.
That number was less for beer and wine combined.
For beer, it was $610 million. And it was like in the twos for wine. to 2023, that number was less for beer and wine combined.
For beer it was 610 million,
and it was like in the twos for wine.
But you're just talking taxes here.
Just straight taxes.
You're not talking profits, revenues,
the other kind of thing.
Just straight taxes,
straight into the coffers of the government.
And so if you're a licensed producer,
one of the licensed producers I talked to that went
into CCAA, which is essentially installed in CEA.
Exactly. We say CCAA to be polite. They estimated between 40 and 45 percent of their top line
was going to taxes and to regulatory fees, including land transfer taxes, things like
that. So very substantial amount of the top line is going into the government.
Do you care about tax rates? Does that have an impact on what you do at all?
I care a lot because one of the big challenges has been access to research funding to do
this kind of work.
Everybody agrees it's in the public good to get better evidence because so many Canadians
are using cannabis for medical purposes and we have these big unanswered questions.
And Senator Stan Kutcher has been a really outspoken advocate for the need for more investment into research and in health research in particular
because the reality is we have been lagging and so for me with the
legalization of cannabis and the associated taxes we were hoping that
this would mean that there would be more resourcing of the Canadian Institutes of
Health Research and other research funders in order to basically convert
some of those legal tax dollars back into answering the questions that Canadians really need answers
to.
But you haven't seen that yet.
There have been some modest investments.
We have seen there have been some grant calls, but if you look in the grand scheme proportionately
in terms of the allocation of resources, it's a drop in the bucket.
The reality is there have not been large-scale grant funding sources to support research.
We now are launching a national network
to support clinical trials on medical cannabis,
and that's all for the good.
But the associated funding is relatively small
at this stage, so in terms of the government
putting its money where its mouth is,
in terms of the need to study the health effects of cannabis as a
medical cannabis research center we haven't really seen that happen.
Gotcha. Ranj I'm gonna make a confession here which I don't normally do on the
air. I know nothing about this stuff okay? Sure. Not a thing. So I'm gonna ask
you some questions right now that will seem very naive and you're gonna help me
as a newbie on all this understand. Tokyo Smoke, what is that?
Tokyo Smoke cannabis retailer
was one of like the early, early retailers,
had a huge presence in, started off in Ontario,
huge presence, was their coffee shop.
They recently filed for CCAA insolvency protection
for 29 stores.
Why did they do that?
It's a very tough market, right?
We've seen price compression.
So there's a number of reasons.
One is, like, in, let's talk about Ontario,
a lot of clustering of stores, right?
So we have approximately 1,400 stores in Ontario.
200 of them are in Toronto, right?
I was talking to one of your colleagues earlier today.
They said there's like four, just right outside the door.
Very hard to differentiate.
Inside the door here?
Just in this neighborhood.
How do I not know that?
Yeah, you're not looking for them.
No, I'm not, all right.
Also, there's no real way to differentiate the stores
because of the regulations that we have.
Again, very heavily regulated industry.
So the stores essentially are very similar
in a lot of regards.
It's not like, let's use alcohol as an example.
It doesn't work in Ontario because of the LCBO,
but if you go to New York,
you could have four stores that sell alcohol
next to each other.
One just specializes in very high-end wine.
One sells scotch.
One's a beer place and a seltzer place.
And one place is like, we just sell everything
at a good price.
And you can make money at all of those.
Here, you're having the same products at the same price,
like how do you differentiate?
There is no differentiation in the product
in the same way as alcohol.
Very hard too because of the regulations
and promotion and brands,
so there's no level of loyalty that way.
Did ever, well listen, again, I don't know,
did people think when this stuff got legalized,
there's going to be so much market out there,
everybody's going to be able to come in
and everybody's gonna be able to make a buck.
Is that what they thought at the time?
I think you have to say that's what people
would have thought otherwise,
why would they have started up their companies?
I think, look, this is an interesting sort of product
because, again, $5 billion industry,
we know there's demand for the product,
but this demand for product has been around
for a very, very long time.
People have been using cannabis in Canada, around the world for a long time.
I think part of the problem became is that it's a very heavily regulated industry, right?
Some people compare to CPG products, consumer packaged goods, but consumer packaged goods
don't have the same level of taxation on them. They don't have the same regulatory burden, right?
So there's a big difference in how to make money
between these things.
And again, I go back to the taxes,
but assuming that 40 to 45% number is accurate,
you're taking that right off the top line.
You haven't even factored in yet your actual cost
to produce this, your margins, right?
So if you go to a cannabis store in Ontario,
about 50% of the price that you're paying
is taxes and government markup.
Doesn't leave a lot of margin to make any money, right?
Do you represent clients for whom you are trying
to lobby government to get the taxes lowered?
We have lots of clients that are lobbying the government
in their own way.
I would say the government is not generally in the business of cutting taxes and giving
money back, although the sad state of affairs is that they're
actually choking up the business, right? We have lots of businesses that just
would be viable if the taxes were, say, just a flat 10% rather than a dollar or
10%. That margin in and of itself would be enough to take what is now a non-profitable business
and turn it into a healthy business.
Can you tell us something that you are working on right now in terms of research?
Tell me one thing you want to know the answer to.
So it's been super challenging to do clinical trials, but we have had a lot of success in
terms of doing observational research, studying the impacts of legalization, studying, for example, the rates of cannabis use disorder among medical
patients.
What is that?
So one of the big questions is, among patients who use cannabis for medical purposes, how
many of them develop addiction to cannabis?
Because this is a real issue in the context of the opioid epidemic, because many people
who developed opioid addiction started with prescription exposure.
So we want to know does that pipeline and that pathway exist for cannabis also?
And so in our observational research, we've been able to document the rates of individuals
who are using medical cannabis who also meet criteria for cannabis use disorder,
the technical definition of cannabis addiction.
And we see varying rates from population to population, but it's a non-trivial level.
It ranges from a low end of around one in 20
to a high end in, as high as one in two in some populations.
So what we see is that there is a similar relationship,
and that's one of the risks that people need to be aware of
when it comes to medical cannabis.
Does your ethnic background factor into whether you're either one in 20 or one in two?
That's a great question.
We haven't looked at that, and the biggest factor seems to be the kinds of products people are using
and why they're using them.
So, oral products that are low addiction liability
have very low rates of individuals developing cannabis use disorder.
The smoked products and people who are using them for mental health issues tend to be where
we see those much higher rates in our research and in other people's research too.
So it's really a challenge and to the point raised before around storefronts, we also
see a lot of people reporting concerns about the density of storefronts and the fact that
there are so many.
And other reports outside of our research center
have found that many of the harms associated
with legalization are not present in jurisdictions
like Quebec where you have provincial monopolies.
So what we know from alcohol and other substances
is that the denser the number of storefronts
and outlets, the higher the risks
to the whole population health.
And that's why this new kind of cannabis climate,
this very friendly cannabis climate,
in terms of the sheer numbers of stores,
which no doubt is challenging from a business standpoint,
is concerning to consumers and associated with some risks.
Ranch, we've got to talk more about the black market here.
Sure.
Obviously, one of the reasons to legalize cannabis
was to put the black market out of business and have it all come under a legal framework.
I gather you've told us that is not happening. How big is the, okay if legal
cannabis is a five billion dollar a year business in Canada now, any guess at what
the illegal market is still is? The numbers indicate 30 to 40 percent of the
overall market is still illegal and like, I don't think the government
or anyone rationally would think that you can totally
do away with the black market.
It's just impossible.
There will always be a kid who can't go to a store
because they're not the right age.
There will always be people that would want a product
that the regulations don't permit.
There will always be users that want to have more product
because they actually need it.
Not for recreational purposes, just for medical purposes.
Theoretically, that should be a small number if you legalize, right?
If the black market before was 100 percent, surely it ought to be a lot smaller now.
Sure, and look, we're talking about over the course of six years a substantial decrease, right?
In what the black market is.
Now listen, the black market has the advantages of they're not regulated, right?
So pricing, for example, they can do
whatever they want on pricing.
Potency of products, right, which could potentially
be a health issue as well, is also not regulated
if you're illegal, right?
And so they have advantages that the legal market
does not have and never will have, right?
So the question becomes is, how do you
minimize that in a way that still protects public policy
and protecting youth, the overall public, right?
So that's the dichotomy of what we're trying to like,
trying to actually govern for.
So it is impossible, basically, to stay
about the black market.
It's always going to be with us.
That's my view.
I just don't see it.
It's also a product that people feel OK purchasing
in the black market, right?
And look, perhaps over time it will decrease.
But if I said to you, come to my house, Steven,
let's have a get together, and I'm serving moonshine
that I bought out of illegally, you would be like, that's crazy.
That's insane.
But if you went to someone's house,
and someone was smoking pot, and it was from the black market,
I think people would be like, yeah, that's-
Big deal.
Yeah, not a big deal, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
I wanna follow up on this one more time,
and that is on the issue of price,
because we've seen in the past,
the illegal cigarette market occasionally
gets bigger and bigger if the taxes on cigarettes get too high.
So every now and then the government lowers the taxes on cigarettes and takes a chunk out of the black market.
Could you do the same thing with cannabis?
I think if you decrease the excise tax there is a chance that the pricing would come down, right,
and still leave enough profitability for licensed producers.
But again, that's a hope and a prayer, right?
People have been lobbying to decrease the excise taxes
for a long time.
It's the number one complaint, I would say,
from licensed producers.
It hasn't happened.
I don't think there is a path forward
for that at the moment.
Maybe the next government will view it differently.
It'll be interesting to see what they do with it. But it is a
very challenging sort of market, right? My understanding was at the beginning
of this year, there was approximately 200 million dollars owing to the government
for excise taxes, outstanding. To the federal government. So that number
may have increased or decreased. And the reason I say it might have increased is
if they're not paying it, it just continues to rack up.
It might have decreased because a lot of companies
are just going into insolvency, CCAA protection,
in order to avoid having to pay these taxes altogether.
Got it.
And I should say that prices can be too low.
What we know is that when the minimum pricing laws
are really important, for example,
in the context of alcohol, to avoid essentially
encouraging heavy drinking.
And so even though low prices compete with the black market, I feel like the Canadian
legalization experiment has been quite successful in terms of displacing and penetrating the
100% contraband market before legalization.
So I think that minimum pricing probably should apply.
I would say that I think that pricing that scales
the amount of THC in the products would be important
because really a lot of the harms and a lot of the risks
are about how much THC is in products.
And when I see products that have 85 or 90% THC,
they're really, I think, toxic in terms of
the risks associated and having a price scaling system
that would really minimize or encourage the use in terms of the risks associated. And having a price scaling system
that would really minimize or encourage
the use of lower THC products would be beneficial,
at least from a health standpoint.
James, I'm gonna follow up with you on the issue
of what you think it will take to get a successful,
significant clinical trial involving humans, obviously,
and cannabis up and running in Canada.
So I think it'll take several ingredients, some of which are already in place. involving humans, obviously, and cannabis, up and running in Canada?
So I think it'll take several ingredients,
some of which are already in place.
So the development now of a network of sites across Canada
to do large-scale medical cannabis research
is already happening.
That's critical.
There needs to be investment in terms of the research bodies
to say, we need answers to the question of cannabis
for chronic pain, we need answers to the question
of cannabis for mental health conditions
like depression, anxiety, and PTSD.
We need answers around cannabis for insomnia.
So there has to be resources,
there has to be gas in the tank.
The third critical ingredient is gonna be working
with regulators to really streamline the requirements
to execute these trials.
Because we've had a number of chapters
of the bureaucratic burden being so high as to effectively
bottleneck research and discourage researchers
from pursuing this work.
Because it was professionally increasingly problematic,
because no progress could be made.
So building a regulatory regime in which research licenses
are available, in which researchers can study
the products that are available in the market now,
and in which feedback is received in a timely way
is gonna be critical for this to move forward.
You and some colleagues recently wrote Health Canada.
So, this got so bad that we wrote an open letter
to Health Canada with more than 200
signatories nationally saying that the framework currently was essentially preventing clinical
trials research.
And since then, there have been some positive changes.
There's now a pathway.
So, for research, for example, giving participants cannabis to study, for example, driving effects or
non-therapeutic effects.
There's a different pathway because before you actually needed to register that as a
clinical trial.
There seems to be a greater interest in thinking differently about what's needed, but the reality
is that some of the regulations still are challenging.
And Steve, I'll highlight one aspect.
The products that can be studied in a clinical trial
have to be what's called GMP certified,
or Good Manufacturing Process certified.
That's like a drug.
But the products that you would buy from a cannabis store
are GPP, or good production practices,
and that's like a food.
So none of the products that can be bought
from either the OCS, the Ontario Cannabis Store,
or any of the storefronts would typically be viable for us to study.
So I could do a personal experiment on myself to see if cannabis works, but if I wanted
to randomize you guys into a clinical trial, none of the products that are widely available
would be viable for that.
And that's a huge barrier because that means that the companies that exist are not producing
products that we as researchers
could study for their health benefits.
There's a vanishingly small number of companies
that have GMP certified products,
and what that means is 99% of the products
that are available can't be studied,
that are available and that Canadians are using
for medical purposes, can't be studied in a systematic way.
It's a real disconnect,
and that's that third piece
of the puzzle that would be critical to reconcile
to do the kinds of world-class research
I think Canadian researchers want to do.
That small number of product that is GMP
is probably making its way outside of the country
for export, right, which even decreases the amount
that's available to you even further, right?
That's right, so when legalization was happening,
we had dozens of licensed producers reach out to us
and say, if you're going to be doing research,
we want to support this.
We'd be happy to supply products.
And they actually told us that our GMP pipeline
goes to places like Germany where medical cannabis
has to be GMP certified.
So even Canadian producers that are making these products
are often actually exporting them.
So this disconnect between what's viable
for people to just buy in the store and consume
versus what researchers can study
is a huge problem and a major barrier.
Just a few minutes left here.
Ranj, I wanna ask you again
about the business side of things.
How many of the 50 American states, if you know,
legalize cannabis right now?
The majority have legalized either medical or recreational, and I think it's only a matter
of time before they all legalize in one form or another.
And generally, the route is legalize medical, get acceptance for that, and then recreational
is generally the path.
Okay.
That leads to the follow-up question, which is, if eventually all 50 states go that route,
what's the impact on Canada?
Yeah. I mean, I think if that happens, I think we could potentially see a number of companies
that are listed on Canadian stock exchanges shift to the US.
I think that will take some time, right?
The requirements to be on the US exchanges are different than in Canada.
So I think we'll see that happen.
I think we could potentially see a focus from external sources.
Organogram just recently closed a tranche
with a large British company, tobacco company.
That would probably shift to the US instead of being in Canada.
So the early mover advantage that we had
has been slowly lost over time and will continue
to be lost if legalization happens in the States.
OK, that's the point I was trying to get to here.
It presumably for Canadian businesses that are in this space, it gets worse the more
and more America legalizes.
Is that right?
Yeah, I think over time, right?
I mean, like it's just a bigger market, right?
And so that's where your focus is going to be, right?
And so people that are investing in Canada or have invested in Canada, if they had their
choice would probably rather invest in the US or UK or Germany
or larger markets, right?
And unfortunately, a lot of money that was put into
the industry early on was wasted on things that actually
ended up not being of importance, right?
So building giant facilities because there was a thought
process that the larger your facility, the more you could
produce and there's gonna be a lack of supply
There is that that is not is not an issue. There's been more than enough supply, right?
So we certainly have lost our advantage in the US legalizing
We'll probably only further damage Canada. You guys gonna go for a doobie after the show's over
No comment
Just curious. Okay. I want to thank you guys for coming in and helping us out with this.
I think we all understand it a lot better right now.
Ranjit Dhillon from McCarthy Tetro, James McKillop from the Michael G. DeGroote Center
for Medicinal Cannabis Research at McMaster University and St. Joe's in Hamilton.
Thank you both very much.
Thank you.