Over the last few years, changes in state and federal laws, as well as tighter international chemical controls, have made it more difficult for meth producers to get the precursor chemicals they need to make the drug. Domestic meth lab incidents have dropped by more than 70 percent since 2004, while seizures of meth along the U.S.-Mexico border are down 32 percent from 2006. The Southwest border seizure declines coincide with aggressive actions by Mexico to limit the amount of meth precursor chemicals coming into the country. In 2004, more than 224 metric tons of pseudoephedrine was imported by Mexico; in 2008, the Calderon Administration has ceased to issue import permits for key meth precursor chemicals, and all remaining supplies in the country must be depleted by 2009.
The decreases in meth use have contributed to a market constriction, placing stress on dealers to maintain revenue flow by decreasing the purity of the drug, while increasing price. The latest data from the Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA) System to Retrieve Information on Drug Evidence (STRIDE) database indicates an 84 percent increase in price per pure gram of meth from January to December of 2007, from $152.39 to $280.06. The purity of meth during the same time period decreased 26 percent.
"Increased drug prices and decreased purity confirm what DEA agents are seeing across this country: a hard hit on the drug supply," said DEA acting administrator Michele M. Leonhart. "DEA and our partners are attacking traffickers' movement of drugs, money, and chemicals like never before, and the data is a strong indicator that we have struck the traffickers a severe blow. The impressive decline in drug use by America's workers is further evidence that our collective efforts are working."
According to the DTI, workplace drug tests have also found sustained decreases in cocaine positives among the U.S. workforce. Quest Diagnostics' latest findings show a 19 percent decrease in cocaine positives, from 72 out of every 10,000 workers testing positive for cocaine in 2006 to 58 out of every 10,000 in 2007. This decline represents the lowest rate of cocaine positives since the DTI began reporting the data more than a decade ago.
"The Drug Testing Index emphasizes the steady reversal of a trend in which methamphetamine positivity rates in the general workforce increased by 68 percent from 2002 to 2003 and peaked in 2004. Results from the Quest Diagnostics Drug Testing Index indicate that the number of positive tests for cocaine was down 19 percent between 2006 and 2007," said Barry Sample, Ph.D., director of science and technology for Quest Diagnostics' Employer Solutions division. "This represents the biggest single-year decline in cocaine positives since 1997."