Oxford Academic Publish: Hemp in the United States: A Case Study of Regulatory Path Dependence

Here’s the Abstract
Hemp in the United States: A Case Study of Regulatory Path Dependence

Trey Malone Kevin Gomez

Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy, ppz001
,https://doi.org/10.1093/aepp/ppz001

Published 08 March 2019

Abstract
The Agricultural Act of 2014 allowed for federally funded research on hemp for the first time since 1937. Since 2014, pro-hemp legislation has received increasingly bipartisan support, culminating with the Hemp Farming Act of 2018, which would remove industrial hemp from its current listing as a Schedule 1 drug, and allow hemp to be treated like any other agricultural commodity. In part because of this legalization, hemp production in the United States has the potential to increase substantially. This study describes what is known about the economic and regulatory considerations of U.S. hemp agriculture through the lens of path dependency. Important questions remain regarding the legal and regulatory landscape of hemp, and are further complicated by its current listing as a Schedule 1 drug.
Industrial hemp,agricultural economics,institutional economics,path dependence

JEL
Q18 – Agricultural Policy; Food PolicyK23 – Regulated Industries and Administrative LawR52 – Land Use and Other Regulations

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https://academic.oup.com/aepp/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/aepp/ppz001/5372476?redirectedFrom=fulltext

Following is the original working paper

SSRN-id3290881


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