This article was originally published on Cannabis & Tech Today, and appears here with permission.
When it comes to global cannabis policy, the United States has set the tone for many decades.
Cannabis was first prohibited in the United States in 1937, and since that time the U.S. has imposed its reefer madness will on the rest of the global community.
Many countries have willingly gone along with the U.S.’s push for continued prohibition, however, it’s a safe assumption that some nations would have preferred to take a more sensible approach, yet refrained from doing so out of fear of backlash from the U.S.
International treaties have kept cannabis prohibition in place in many parts of the world.
Those prohibition policies have ruined countless lives while also preventing the cannabis industry from doing its part to boost local economies, generate tax revenues, and create jobs.
This begs the question, “what would cannabis legalization in the U.S. mean for other countries?”
A New Era
Hypothetically, if the United States legalized cannabis at the federal level it would usher in a new era not only in the U.S., but around the world.
Cannabis research would receive a huge boost.
Research is being conducted despite cannabis prohibition, however, it would thrive if/when it was allowed to be fully embraced by the international community.
Many countries either limit cannabis research or fully refrain from allowing it to be conducted because of prohibition policies and fear of backlash from the United States specifically.
Several countries have pointed to prohibition in the United States as being the source of ongoing banking issues, including in Jamaica.
The U.S. plays a major role in influencing global banking policies and practices, and because cannabis is prohibited in the U.S., it will continue to cause issues in other countries until the U.S. legalizes, at which point banking services for the global cannabis industry will increase considerably.
Innovation
If/when cannabis is legalized in the United States it will have a positive and significant innovation butterfly effect on the global cannabis industry.
Instead of innovative ideas being stifled by prohibition policies, inventors and thought leaders will be able to thrive.
Just as entrepreneurs from around the world work very hard to break into the U.S. consumer market in many non-cannabis industries, so too will they do the same to reap the financial rewards of making a big splash in the United States cannabis industry.
Unlike some industries that are typically only popular in the United States, cannabis is very popular in virtually every country, and any innovative cannabis product that becomes popular in the U.S will presumably be very popular in other countries too.
Ideally, legalization in the U.S. will not only result in international innovators feeling freer to explore their pursuits without the threat of persecution, there will hopefully also be public funding available to help get truly revolutionary ideas from being just a vision to becoming reality.
Read the original Article on Cannabis & Tech Today
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