How the legal opium market shaped global trade - and led to an opioid crisis
a day ago
- #Opium History
- #Global Trade
- #Opioid Crisis
- Opium historically functioned as a tool of geopolitics and state power, similar to rare earth elements today, shaping global trade and alliances.
- Benjamin R. Siegel's book traces the continuity from 19th-century legal opium trade in colonial India to the modern U.S. opioid crisis, highlighting institutional persistence.
- India remains unique for producing opium gum using centuries-old methods, a legacy of British colonial systems maintained post-independence.
- The opioid crisis is not just about the drugs' dangers but their dual role as effective painkillers and commodities controlled by political and economic systems.
- The U.S.-led international drug control regime in the 20th century used opioid supply chains to exert influence over other nations' agricultural and trade policies.
- Siegel's research emphasizes the human impact on farmers in India, whose livelihoods depend on opium amidst global condemnation and shifting markets.
- History shows opioid crises repeat due to systemic issues in production, distribution, and access, not the molecules themselves, requiring political and economic reforms.
- The classification of opioids as medicine or contraband is a form of sovereignty, with the same molecule varying based on who controls and regulates it.