Current Affairs
Random House Canada Hardcover, 304 pages
November 2005 $35.00 0-679-31329-X
ABOUT THE BOOK
According to Forbes magazine (November 2003),
marijuana is “Canada’s most valuable agricultural
product — bigger than wheat, cattle or timber.”
Bud Inc. gives us an inside look at
this thriving homegrown industry.
Although the cultivation and selling of marijuana
remains illegal in Canada, it is already big business,
especially in British Columbia. Law enforcement officials
estimate that the annual wholesale value of B.C. marijuana
is now $6 billion, about 5% of the province’s
total economy. If these stats are correct, it is B.C.’s
largest export. Ontario and Quebec are not far behind.
Vancouver journalist Ian Mulgrew has been following
the rise of this underground economy for some time,
and knows all the key players, political and entrepreneurial.
Comparisons to the rum-runners of the Prohibition
era are not unfounded. These so-called “pot
barons” are all savvy businessmen who have built
their empires using tried and true business models.
Cash-strapped governments, pharmaceutical companies
and other big businesses are well aware of the potential
profits, and Canada has been at the forefront of the
global movement to legalize medical marijuana and
decriminalize the recreational use of the drug. Estimates
vary, but it’s thought that nearly a million
people in Canada could benefit from medicinal marijuana,
yet only about a thousand are currently legally authorized
to use it. Many feel that marijuana should be grown,
regulated and taxed like any other commodity.
Following the evolution of the marijuana trade from
rich kids smuggling it in their luggage, to trans-oceanic
operations involving tons of dope, to today’s
thriving multi-billion-dollar domestic industry, Bud
Inc. is a fascinating study of real-life
supply-and-demand economics.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
photo credit: Ian Lindsay,
The Vancouver Sun
Award-winning journalist Ian Mulgrew has worked for
newspapers and magazines, authored three books and co-authored
another. He has also produced and hosted numerous broadcast
programs. He is currently the legal affairs columnist
for the Vancouver Sun. |