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Honduras Vice President Wants To Create 85,000 Cannabis Jobs

One of the biggest selling points for reforming cannabis laws, for better or worse, is the industry component. Studies and polls have consistently found that more people support legalizing a taxed and regulated industry than just simply removing prohibition for personal use.

An example of this can be found in the results of a recent poll conducted in Australia. When asked if cannabis should be legal 50% of poll respondents expressed support for such a public policy shift. However, more people (55%) supported regulating the cannabis industry like tobacco and alcohol.

In a perfect world, people would support cannabis reform because it’s the right thing to do. In a less perfect world, some amount of voters need a societal financial incentive in order to support cannabis reform.

Job Creation

Recent history has clearly demonstrated that when the legal cannabis industry is allowed to operate, the industry can create a significant number of jobs.

For instance, the legal cannabis industry is responsible for creating over 151,000 jobs in Canada, and at least another 428,000 in the United States. You can compare those numbers to the number of jobs in other large industries and you will quickly see the job creation potential of the emerging cannabis industry.

Consider the fact that the United States Bureau of Labor and Statistics estimates that there are 285,980 hairdressers, hairstylists, and cosmetologists in the U.S.

The legal cannabis industry clearly exceeds that number. The cannabis industry’s job creation potential is even more impressive when considering that cannabis is still prohibited at the federal level in the United States.

Once the legal cannabis industry is permitted to exist in as many places as salons, the number of jobs in the legal cannabis industry will be exponentially greater than it is currently.

Honduras

The Vice President of Honduras has expressed a very strong desire to legalize medical cannabis in his country, seeming to be largely motivated by the industry’s ability to create jobs.

“First, what I propose is a project to generate employment and to generate foreign exchange for the country. I’m not thinking of legalizing marijuana, nor the medicinal part. There are simply two objectives: to generate employment, because -for example- 5,000 hectares generate 85,000 jobs and we have a deficit of half a million unemployed. Apart from that, it is a millionaire business, because the countries that are close to the equator have sun all year round, we have excellent lighting. So, the cost of production is low, it is so low that producing a gram costs 15 cents of a dollar and producing the same gram in Europe or the United States costs above 1 dollar.” Honduras’ Vice President Salvador Nasralla stated in a recent interview with El Planteo.

Honduras has a population of roughly 10 million people, with roughly 6.4 million of them being 18 years old or older. The unemployment rate among Honduras’ labor force is about 10%, so the creation of 85,000 jobs would provide a tremendous boost to the struggling country.

Cannabis reform is not imminent in Honduras, however, the country is definitely trending in the right direction. It will be a while before the country generates the number of jobs that Vice President Nasralla is hoping for, but any number of legal cannabis jobs is better than the current situation.

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Could Honduras Become The Next Central American Country To Enact Cannabis Reform?

The Central American country with the highest levels of violence in the world may be on track to legalize medical cannabis

If Carlos Umaña, the deputy for the Salvador Party of Honduras, not to mention the vice president of the country Slavador Nasralla has anything to do with it, Honduras may well be on track to be one of the next Central American countries to legalize medical cannabis.

Both have recently come out in favour of legalizing the cultivation of the same to create thousands of jobs for Hondurans.

Currently, it is illegal to use and cultivate cannabis in the country.

“Proposing its usefulness under this perspective and exporting it is not a crazy proposal, it is rather to give it an appropriate debate looking for benefits that are now acceptable worldwide,” Umaña said.

Of course, there are other reasons for legalizing cannabis production here. According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the country had a murder rate of 92 per 100,000 people directly connected to the illicit drug trade as of 2012. Drug trafficking gangs routinely use the country as a transit point for drugs on route to the United States. In doing so, they create a huge amount of violence in disputes with rival gangs over territory, extortion, and money laundering.

As a result, all illicit use and cultivation of drugs, including cannabis is harshly punished. The current ruling decree, passed in 1989, punishes all drug use and cultivation, although first offenders are automatically sent to rehab if they were only cultivating for personal use and are addicted to the drugs found in their possession.

Regardless, Honduran jails have reached a breaking point, including those held under preventive detention – meaning they had not yet been sentenced.

A New Industry for The Land of The Maya?

Honduras is bordered by Guatemala, El Salvador, and Guatemala. Before the arrival of the Spanish in the 16th century, it was home to several important Mesoamerican cultures, including the Maya. The Mayans used cannabis widely, including in raised structures that were until recently miscategorized by archaeologists as religious pyramids. They consumed cannabis either by smoking it or grinding the flower into powder to make a powerful drink that they used instead of alcohol.

The country is characterized by thin, calcium-infused soil and semi-deciduous rainforest – a perfect climate in other words for growing cannabis.

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