On that, we'll have to disagree, and wait until the numbers come out next year. In the meantime,
Marijuana economics: predicting Ontario's legal pot market
Data on the potential for recreational weed sales suggest retail value of some $2 billion in first year
Marijuana economics: predicting Ontario's legal pot market - Toronto - CBC News
Want a job selling legal marijuana? You face an awkward dilemma
By Patrick Cain
It would make for a seriously awkward job interview.
Ontario plans to have 150 publicly owned marijuana stores open across the province by 2020. They’ll be staffed by people with what provincial employees’ union chief Warren ‘Smokey’ Thomas calls “good union jobs.” (Hourly wages for Ontario liquor store workers top out at over $27 an hour.)
And, as chance would have it, part of the province’s work force with years of experience in selling marijuana is about to come on the job market, as a promised shutdown of semi-tolerated dispensaries takes place.
https://globalnews.ca/news/3736757/dispensary-workers-hired-to-sell-legal-marijuana/
"Thomas said the 40 stores will likely require about 200 new union members and that could eventually grow to 1,000 or more."
https://www.thestar.com/news/queens...trained-for-pot-store-openings-next-year.html
One could say that businesses will have to pay big bux to employees, and that will reduce profits. The feds are expecting $400 million in sales the first two years. But I suggest that trusting a CDN politician's estimate is foolhardy. Colorado, with a population of 5.5 million, topped 1 billion (US) in sales in 2016. That's about 1.3 billion in Canuckian dinars. Even with a different business and tax structure, our sales will be higher than the feds have estimated.
Further, I would say that Parliament has no idea of how much will be made. They will have to wait and see, just like the rest of us.
Colorado Topped $1 Billion in Legal Marijuana Sales in 2016 | Fortune