Pennsylvania Moves Toward Legal Marijuana and a Potential $600 Million Boost.

While neighboring states rake in hundreds of millions from legal cannabis sales, Pennsylvania has watched from the sidelines. But that could soon change.

On Wednesday, the Pennsylvania House approved a bill to legalize recreational marijuana.

The legislation now heads to the Senate, where supporters hope to keep the momentum going.

If it passes, Governor Josh Shapiro has already signaled he’s ready to make it law.

How Much Money Are We Talking About?

If Pennsylvania follows the example of states like Illinois and Michigan, the numbers could be huge.

Experts estimate the state could bring in anywhere from $400 million to $600 million per year in cannabis tax revenue once the market fully matures.

Even in the first year, earnings could easily top $100 million as the industry gets off the ground.

But the economic benefits wouldn’t stop at taxes. A legal cannabis market could create 20,000 to 40,000 new jobs across cultivation, retail, security, marketing, and logistics.

Analysts also point to a ripple effect, more business for real estate, legal services, tourism, and other industries.

All told, Pennsylvania could see $2 billion to $4 billion in additional economic activity annually.

Playing Catch-Up

So far, Pennsylvania has fallen behind its neighbors:

That’s left Pennsylvania residents crossing state lines to buy cannabis legally elsewhere, taking their dollars with them.

The Senate will now take up the bill. It’s unclear how quickly they’ll move, but advocates are urging lawmakers to act before the legislative session ends.

Governor Shapiro made his position clear: “Now it’s time to find agreement and send a bill to my desk.”

Fast Facts About Legal Marijuana and State Revenues

 

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