Filed Under: Policy Failure in Real Time

California lawmakers are finally offering tax relief to cannabis operators, but it feels like too little, too late. For years, the state squeezed every possible dollar out of growers, distributors, and dispensaries, bleeding the legal market while fueling the underground economy it was supposed to eliminate. Now, after hundreds of businesses have shuttered, after thousands of jobs have been lost, and after billions in potential tax revenue have been diverted into the black market, the same politicians who created the crisis are pretending they are here to save it.
The move comes as California faces its harshest cannabis recession since legalization began. The number of licensed cannabis businesses in the state has dropped by more than 20 percent in just the last two years. Cultivators have defaulted on loans, dispensaries have closed their doors, and consumers have drifted back to unlicensed sellers who offer cheaper prices without the crushing tax burden. The state that once branded itself the crown jewel of cannabis now looks like a cautionary tale.
This is not about growers failing to adapt. It is about a government that never gave them a chance. From the start, California piled on cultivation taxes, excise taxes, local taxes, and compliance fees that made running a legal operation nearly impossible. At one point, cultivators were paying a $161-per-pound tax just to move product into the legal system. Add to that the 15 percent excise tax and the local rates that in some areas topped 10 percent, and the numbers never worked. Legal weed became more expensive than street weed, and everyone acted surprised when customers chose the street.
Politicians knew this was happening. They knew because the data showed it. They knew because operators begged them for relief. They knew because state reports documented the steady growth of the illicit market. But instead of fixing the system, they kept promising that the next tweak, the next task force, the next enforcement blitz would make legalization work. It never did.
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Now the state is cutting taxes, finally acknowledging what everyone in the industry has been screaming for years: the system was broken. But cutting taxes in 2025 does not erase the damage done since 2018. The California Department of Cannabis Control has already lost over 1,200 licensees in the past 18 months. Entire communities that invested in legal markets have seen their businesses collapse. Small farms in the Emerald Triangle, the heart of California cannabis culture, have gone under while corporate operators with deeper pockets survived the storm. What was supposed to be a pathway to legitimacy became a death trap for the very people legalization was supposed to protect.
The hypocrisy is staggering. California politicians brag about progressive values while presiding over one of the most regressive cannabis tax systems in the world. They talk about equity while equity applicants drown in fees and delays. They talk about protecting consumers while driving them into the arms of untested, unregulated sellers. And when the failure becomes undeniable, they cut taxes and act like saviors.
The truth is the state killed its own market. And this tax relief, while necessary, may come too late to bring it back. Consumers have already lost trust. Businesses have already gone bankrupt. The underground has already entrenched itself as the cheaper, easier option. Once that happens, it is nearly impossible to reverse.
Other states should pay attention. California is the biggest cannabis market in the world, and it has shown everyone exactly how not to do legalization. Do not overtax. Do not overregulate. Do not treat the plant like a cash machine. Because if you do, you will end up where California is now: scrambling to fix a disaster of your own making while pretending you did not see it coming.
Cannabis legalization was supposed to end prohibition, empower communities, and bring billions into public coffers. Instead, California turned it into another hustle, another way to shake down an industry while protecting the status quo. This tax cut is not a reform. It is a confession. And it is one that came far too late.
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