(introduction...)
Illicit drugs typically move internationally from less developed
areas of the world to more developed countries, where most drug consumption
takes place. In recent years, just as the growth of legitimate global businesses
has been facilitated by the globalization of financial systems and market
relations, drug producers and traffickers have also taken advantage of the
opportunities presented by the changing macro-economic environment. They have
organized themselves on a global scale and put a significant proportion of their
drug profits in financial centres offering secrecy and attractive investment
returns. Their adoption of high-tech computer and communications technology has
facilitated the expansion of their trade and the protection of industrial
secrets. Drug traffickers are now able to launder illicit profits by moving
money around the world electronically with few national controls. They are aided
by porous borders due, in some cases, to policies intended to encourage trade
and investment, and in other cases to weak governments and weak or unenforceable
laws against money laundering, fraud or organized crime.
The consumption, production and trade of illicit drugs have a
wide variety of adverse socio-economic and political effects. These activities
can at times undermine the legal economy (for instance by contributing to an
overvalued exchange rate). They contribute to increased crime and social
disruption on all levels, and their adverse effects can in fact be intensified
by drug control laws. Most of the benefits and liabilities associated with the
production and trade of drugs ultimately derive from illegality itself, a
condition which the drug control laws, by definition, establish. Illegality
provides what has been called the crime tax: the difference between
prices in legal and illegal markets. This tax is reaped principally
by traffickers, but they pass on a sufficient proportion to peasant growers to
create incentives for drug crop production. Given the lack of alternative
economic opportunities, especially in rural areas of producing countries,
illegality and the profits associated with it make it very difficult to devise a
policy mix of punishments and incentives that would induce growers to abandon
their drug crops. In many cases, moreover, drug control initiatives have
actually contributed indirectly to social dislocation, corruption,
militarization and abuse of human rights.
The following sections examine in more detail the economic,
social and political impacts of illicit drugs at the production, trafficking and
consumption stages, as well as the forces contributing to the problem. Effective
policy strategies should be based on an understanding of the linkages between
these different stages in the illicit drug
chain.