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US (MN): Can state businesses compete with illegal market after tax hike?

A last-minute tax hike on cannabis products passed as part of Minnesota lawmakers' special session budget compromise may prove to be a boon to illicit dealers. That's according to cannabis industry experts, business owners, and at least one prominent DFL lawmaker who say the state's relatively high cannabis tax will give consumers reason to avoid regulated, legal dispensaries in favor of informal sources on the black market.

Minnesota's 15% state tax on marijuana and other cannabis products is among the highest in the country, trailing only Arizona (16%), Oregon (17%), California (19%), and Washington (37%).

"I thought it was the wrong thing to do, increasing the tax," said Sen. Ann Rest, DFL-New Hope, chair of the Senate Tax Committee. "What we saw in California is that the high tax on legitimate cannabis leads straight to the black market. And I'm very concerned that that's going to have the same or similar impact here."

Minnesota's cannabis tax was initially set at 10%. The increase was a product of bipartisan budget negotiations between Gov. Tim Walz, Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, House Speaker Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, and the late Speaker Emeritus Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park. The leaders stepped in to try to forge a compromise on the state's budget after months of gridlock in the Legislature due to a tied House and a one-seat DFL majority in the Senate.

Read more at MinnPost

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