The social cost of drugs is the monetary cost of both the consequences of their trade and their consumption. In this paper, drugs considered are tobacco and alcohol, which are legal, plus those that are illegal. The social cost is the sum of the external cost: value of loss in quality of life, value of years of life lost and value of loss in productivity, plus public expenditure. Public expenditure consists of public spending on medical care, prevention, and law enforcement, minus savings from unpaid pensions and taxes levied on tobacco and alcohol. The parameters for the calculations have used the recommendations of a French governmental working group (2013) Quinet, L'évaluation socioéconomique des investissements publics [Internet], Centre d'Analyse Stratégique, 2013, http://www.strategie.gouv.fr/sites/strategie.gouv.fr/files/archives/CGSP_Evaluation_socioeconomique_17092013.pdf , and the health data were derived from the scientific literature. The social costs are €122 billion for tobacco, €118 billion for alcohol, and €8.7 billion for illegal drugs. The largest fraction of the costs (53, 56, and 31 %, respectively) derives from the number of deaths, 79,000 for tobacco, 49,000 for alcohol, and 1600 for illegal drugs, given the high cost of a year of life lost (€115,000). The external cost corresponds to 86, 97, and 68 % of the social cost, respectively, for tobacco, alcohol, and illegal drugs. The annual drug-related net expenditure represents €13.9, €3.0, and €2.3 billion, respectively, for tobacco, alcohol, and illegal drugs. The tax revenues on tobacco and alcohol, €10.4 and €3.2 billion, represent less than half of the corresponding healthcare costs, which are €25.9 and €7.7 billion.
La loi de 1970 « relative aux mesures sanitaires de lutte contre la toxicomanie et à la répression du trafic et de l’usage illicite de substance vénéneuses » constitue encore le principal cadre légal des politiques prohibitionnistes en France. Elle laisse pourtant dans un flou juridique la distinction entre usage récréatif et toxicomanie d’une part, et d’autre part entre consommateur.trice et trafiquant.e, ce qui conduit à un relatif arbitraire des condamnations.
Les comportements individuels sont un objet d’étude commun à l’économie et à la psychologie. Le propos est d’identifier les apports potentiels de cette dernière à la théorie économique dans le domaine des comportements addictifs et ce, afin de pallier les limites des modèles actuels essentiellement issus de la théorie de l’addiction rationnelle. La prise en compte d’une polyphasie cognitive chez l’individu, ainsi que du rôle de ses émotions et de son identité sociale dans un modèle économique, permettent également d’élargir l’éventail des politiques publiques préconisées, qui se limitaient auparavant à des hausses de prix et à une limitation des externalités.
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