Narconomics

SHALINI S SHARMA

Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, the leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), was killed by Mexican security forces on February 22. His death triggered a “decapitation strike” effect, where the loss of a singular, charismatic leader causes a power vacuum, leading to internal fracturing and external “mass killings” as factions fight for control.

Those who consume it die a painful death, those who sell it die a violent death but that fails to deter scores who are lured by the dazzle of a quick buck

Illegal drug trade is one of the largest shadow economies in the world. Its scale is such that it needs to be seen not just as a criminal activity, but as a massive, sophisticated global enterprise.

Market size: Conservative estimates from the United Nations and various think tanks place the annual turnover of this business between $400 billion and $650 billion.

Global impact: This represents nearly 1 per cent of total global trade. To put that in perspective, if the drug trade were a country, its “GDP” would rank among the top 25 nations in the world.

The “Amazon” of crime: Modern cartels like the CJNG operate like multinational corporations. They have logistics wings, legal departments for money laundering, and “R&D” labs for making synthetic drugs like fentanyl.

The economics of risk and reward

The economics of drugs are driven by artificial scarcity. Because drugs are illegal, the “risk premium” is enormous.

Stage Estimated value (example of cocain) Farm gate (raw leaf in the Andes) ~ $500 – $800 Export point (refined in Colombia) ~ $2,000 – $5,000 Wholesale (entry into the US / Europe) ~ $25,000 – $35,000 Retail (street level sales) $100,000+ High profit, low entry cost: For synthetic drugs like fentanyl, the profit margins are even higher because they don’t require vast fields of crops — just a small lab and cheap chemicals.

Vertical integration: Cartels now control every step from “seed to street,” allowing them to capture the profit at every level. One of the biggest challenges in stopping the drug trade is that many of its “ingredients” are essential for everyday life. Origins: From empire to underground The international drug trade didn’t start in the shadows; it started with empires.

The opium wars of 19th century: The British Empire used its military to force China to accept opium imports from India to balance trade deficits. This was the first major “state-sponsored” international drug trade. nThe prohibition pivot from early 20th century: In the early 1900s, international treaties, such as the 1912 Hague Convention, began criminalising substances like opium and cocaine.

The shift to cartels: As legal supply dried up but demand remained, criminal organisations stepped in. By the 1970s and 80s, South American groups, like the Medellín Cartel, professionalised the smuggling of cocaine, followed by Mexican cartels who took over the supply lines into North America.

Natural raw materials

Opium poppy: Used for heroin, poppy is also the legal source of morphine and codeine for pharmaceutical industry. n Coca leaf: Used for cocaine, but used legally in South America for teas and traditionally for altitude sickness.

Synthetic “precursors”

This is the real battleground for authorities. The CJNG (El Mencho’s group) specialised in synthetic drugs. These require precursor chemicals, most of which have massive legitimate uses:

Acetone & ether: Used to refine cocaine and heroin; also used globally as paint thinners and industrial solvents.

Pseudoephedrine: A key ingredient for Meth; also the primary ingredient in many common cold and allergy medicines.

Phenylacetic acid: Used to make Meth; also used in perfumes, flavorings, and the production of Penicillin.

otassium permanganate: Used to purify cocaine; also used in water treatment to remove odours and iron.

Because these chemicals are vital for global industry, they are shipped in massive quantities daily. Cartels “hide” their orders within legitimate shipments or bribe officials to divert small percentages of these industrial supplies to lure labs.

Farm gate (raw leaf in the Andes) ~ $500 – $800
Export point(refined in Colombia) ~ $2,000 – $5,000
Wholesale (entryinto the US / Europe) ~ $25,000 – $35,000
Retail(street level sales)$100,000+

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