After the Second World War Germany experienced a severe shortage of ci
garettes and, as a consequence, most of the evils we know from drug pr
ohibitions: black markets, crime and corruption, and desperate addicts
. Based on the analysis of newspapers from 1945 to 1949 and on intervi
ews with witnesses, the paper describes this crisis as a peculiar form
of prohibition, with economic forces playing the role of legal restra
ints. In a concluding discussion it shows that policy makers - as far
as tobacco is concerned - have learned the lesson from history, shied
away from prohibition and turned to attempts at demand reduction, subs
tance control and restrictions of opportunities to use. The success of
this policy might well be relevant for drug policy in general.