Affiliation:
1. Paul Merage School of Business University of California, Irvine Irvine CA USA
2. Program in Public Health, Susan & Henry Samueli College of Health Sciences University of California, Irvine Irvine CA USA
3. Public Health Institute Berkeley CA USA
Abstract
AbstractAimsThe aim of this study is to identify cannabis products according to their appeal among young adults and measure product sales trends.Design, setting and participantsThis was a retrospective comparative study using point‐of‐sale data from licensed recreational cannabis retailers that include buyer age with birth year entered by retailers, set in California, USA. Cannabis purchases by young adults (aged 21–24, GenZ) were compared with older adults (age 25+) over 4 years (2018–21).MeasurementsSales for six cannabis product categories were analyzed using a commercial data set with imputations and a raw data set. Age‐appeal metrics were dollar and unit sales to young adults, and dollar and unit share ratios (young adults/older adults), where a share ratio of 100 denotes age‐appeal comparability. A product category was considered more young‐adult appealing than others if its mean on a metric was at least one standard deviation above the grand mean across all product categories.FindingsFlower (cannabis plant material) and vapor pen appealed to young adults based on absolute dollar sales, dominating young‐adult spending compared with other cannabis products (37.24 and 31.83%, respectively). Vapor pen and concentrate appealed to young adults based on dollar share ratios of 152, meaning these products comprised a 52% greater share of young‐adult cannabis spending relative to older‐adult spending (31.83/20.97% and 10.47/6.88%, respectively). Less appealing to young adults were pre‐roll, edible/beverage and absorbable products (tincture/sublingual, capsule and topical). Flower showed the largest dollar sales growth (B = +$3.50 million/month), next to vapor pen (B = +$1.55 million/month). Vapor pen tied for highest growth in the percent of product dollars from the largest package size (B = +0.85%/month) and showed the steepest price decline (B = −0.53 price per gram/month).ConclusionsIn California, USA, from 2018 to 2021, relative to older adults, young adults spent a greater share of their cannabis dollars on vapor pen and concentrate (products with high potency of delta‐9‐tetrahydrocannabinol).
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