Germany was super excited when it announced plans for a recreational cannabis legalization last May. Since that time, problems surfaced concerning EU regulation, and whether Germany would face obstacles in that direction. While some in the country want to push through, it seems Germany is likely to bow to EU pressure; and greatly scale back its original plan. A new draft law is now anticipated after Easter. What should we expect?
What we know
No one knows for sure what Germany is about to do, and we won’t until right after Easter. But recent issues concerning EU regulation have certainly taken the steam out of the sales. The legislation is already late for submission, and was originally planned for release by the end of the first quarter of 2023. Karl Lauterbach, the German health minister, says that the plan is to release a new draft after Easter; though we have no confirmation on what this means.
The reason for confusion stems from issues Germany has run up against as a member of the EU, since its looking to break with EU mandate. Whereas a few months ago there was a great desire to push back by many lawmakers (and still is), last month it was indicated that the bill might get scaled back in an effort to not deal with international legal issues. So far, the only thing confirmed by Lauterbach, is that “legalization is planned throughout Germany,” indicating a widespread measure of some kind is still in motion.
Much of the government is at odds with any plan to minimize the original legalization plan. Said FDP member Kristine Lütke to Zeit Online, “We need Germany-wide legalization because the black market can only be pushed back if quality-assured cannabis for recreational use can be traded in certified shops throughout Germany. If you can only legally buy quality-assured cannabis in a few cities, the black market will survive.”
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The original framework was set to allow adults 18 and up to purchase and have 20-30 grams of cannabis. The cannabis was supposed to be sold at government licensed stores, and possibly pharmacies as well. That initial framework, which was backed by the governing coalition, was also set to allow the self-cultivation of up to three plants.
The framework also spoke of adding an extra “special consumption tax” on cannabis products, alongside the country’s standard sales tax. This amount was not settled on, and the framework called for the tax amount to leave products at overall prices that can compete with the black market.
Though the government did pass this framework at the end of 2022, issues outside of Germany escalated when it came time for EU approval. And now it seems that this framework will likely get modified from its original version; to something more manageable for the EU.
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