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Plan to legalise cannabis in Australia and use it to pay for a massive increase to Centrelink dole payments
- Taxes could then fund a dole increase of $80 a fortnight
- Canada has already greatly loosened its restrictions
A new study has found that legalising cannabis in cannabis in Australia could raise up to $28billion in taxes in a decade and take money away from organised crime.
The Greens commissioned the Parliamentary Budget Office research which found it would mean the JobSeeker and Youth Allowances could be increased by $80 a fortnight.
Canada has already greatly loosened restrictions, allowing cannabis to be bought by those aged 18 and over at both government-run shops and licensed retailers.
Legalising cannabis in cannabis in Australia could raise up to $28billion in taxes in a decade. Pictured is a woman smoking weed
It is still a crime in Canada to sell marijuana to a child, smoke in public, grow more than four plants at home or to carry more than 30 grams.
The Greens’ proposal, if it was to become law, would allow people to legally grow grow six plants, but it would still be against the law to sell cannabis to kids.
‘We know that legalising cannabis reduces harm by keeping people out of the criminal justice system, this report shows how it will also bring in tens of billions of dollars of public revenue as well,’ Greens Senator David Shoebridge told news.com.au.
Mr Shoebridge, who is the Greens’ justice spokesman, said the pot taxes could also be used for housing.
‘With the revenue generated from legalised cannabis we can build new public housing for a quarter of a million people or lift JobSeeker by $80 a fortnight.
‘This is an opportunity for some serious investment in social justice.’
Drugs legislation is a state issue, but the Greens say cannabis could be regulated federally under section 51 of the constitution.
The Greens are calling for marijuana to be legalised. Pictured is a commercial marijuana growing operation
‘Legal cannabis makes enormous social and economic sense,’ said Mr Shoebridge.
‘When we legalise cannabis we take billions away from organised crime, police and the criminal justice system and we can then spend it on schools, housing, hospitals and social support.’
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