The rights and wrongs of selling synthetic highs may be debatable, but there seems no doubt that the business was incredibly profitable. Ministry of Health figures show those doing the importing and selling were making mammoth margins. Synthetic psychoactive substances were mainly imported from China, for about $1500 to $2000 a kilogram. A kilogram was enough to make about 10,000 small to medium sized packets of smokable product. The most popular products were selling in packets of 1.5 to 2.5 grams, for $20 or so. The cost of manufacturing was about $1 to $2 a packet, resulting in a profit of about $18 a packet. As 3.5 million packets were sold since July last year, it seems operators raked in more than $60 million in profit in less than a year.
One of the shortcomings of the old policy on the sale of legal highs was the failure to get even close to a system for testing their safety. Two associate health ministers had responsibility for this during the period in question. One was Todd McClay, the other was Peter Dunne. Both were attending to business overseas this week when Health Minister Tony Ryall patched things up, introducing legislation prohibiting the drugs until safety regulations are ready. Dunne got the better of the deal, with a meeting of the Open Government Partnership in Bali. McClay was dispatched to Kazakhstan for a meeting of the Asian Development Bank.
Kiwisaver comfort
Ex-MP Peter Neilson, indefatigable head of the Financial Services Council, continues to battle for more generous tax treatment of KiwiSaver schemes. His latest release this week pushes for changes to deliver "a comfortable retirement at about two times NZ Super alone". Super now gives a couple $29,355 a year, after tax, so that would mean almost $59,000 a year after tax. Comfortable? Depends on your definition.
Political football