This is another post from an Economic Policy Working Group meeting at Hoover, in which simple undergraduate supply and demand analysis, creatively applied, leads to a surprising result.
Casey Mulligan presented "Prices and Policies in Opioid Markets." Paper, slides and video of the presentation. (Updated link now works)
Once prescription opioids became an evident crisis, the government took steps to restrict the supply, raising the price. Yet opioid consumption and overdoses went up. Explain that Mr. Chicago economist!
Here's the clever answer:
There are two ways to buy opioids, 1) legally or semi-legally; i.e. get opioids that come from pharmaceutical companies and are prescribed to someone by a doctor or 2) illegally."In the earlier years, opioid subsidies are created and expanded for patients and prescribers while regulations are relaxed. In about 2010 policies begin to swing in the other direction as the with reformulation (see below) and programs discouraging prescription supply to secondary markets. ... enforcement of illicit-drug prohibitions was less of a priority between 2013 and 2016.
(i) heroin was significantly more expensive per MGE than Rx opioids in the 1990s, (ii) illicit opioids became cheaper over time, especially since 2013, and ultimately cheaper than Rx opioids, and (iii) beginning in about 2011, Rx opioids became more expensive or difficult to access for nonmedical use due to regulatory and fiscal changes.
The tide of needle litter came in heavy at the start of every month, when benefit checks arrived and people were briefly flush. .... There were far fewer by month’s end, but when the first of the month came again, a fresh swell always followed.
Michael Shellenberger thought to ask the question, receiving a different and even more uncomfortable answer, theft, though also benefits here.
Don't jump from these observations to a policy conclusion, which is not my point. I don't have an easy solution to the combination of drugs and homelessness. But following the money is surely a question that needs to be asked if we wish to understand the forces behind widespread addiction, and the externalities that drug users create. This might be a case in which paternalism is justified, and cash benefits not such a good idea.
Meanwhile, drug use is apparently way down in Afghanistan, by methods that we would not want to use, but an interesting fact (and an absorbing report) as well.



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