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Crime & Poverty



 Do overall economic conditions affect crime?

– Study times of economic depression

– Look at crime over time, during periods of prosperity and

downturns

 Does unemployment affect crime?

 Does economic inequality affect crime?

– Compare crime rates in wealthy and poor areas

– Is inequality more important than income? Are poor areas

that exist in or near wealthy areas particularly affected?

 Doesn’t address individual characteristics

Early studies



 1800’s France - Guerry

– Wealthiest regions more property crime, less violent crime

 Opportunities – more stuff to steal

– Lack of education not related to crime

 More education, more violence

 1800’s France - Quetelet

– Men more likely to commit crime

 Especially poor, unemployed, undereducated

– Opportunities important

 Poor areas had less crime

 Crime more likely to happen in better off areas, by poor and

unemployed

– Inequality within richer areas might breed resentment

 Crime consequence of moral character; virtues break down if poor

Crime and overall economic conditions



 More crime during economic slumps

– Pratt and Lowenkamp: During 1976 - 1994, homicides were

negatively associated with economic activity

 Contraindications

– Great Depression (1928-1940) – Henry and Short

 General crime rate does not seem to increase

 Crimes of violence declined

– Cho - 1970 - Percentage of people below poverty level in 49

largest cities not associated with seven FBI index crimes

– During the 1960’s, as the economy expanded, crime and

delinquency increased

– During the 1990’s, as the economy expanded, crime and

delinquency decreased

Crime and poverty



 Strong association between poverty and crime

– Ehrlich - 1940, 50, 60 - association between property crime and

poor households

– 1974 - Loftin and Hill - index of structural poverty

 Infant mortality, education, income, single parent families

 Strongly correlated with State homicide rates

– 1990 - Lee - concentration of poverty is important

– Stretsky et al - More concentrated the poverty, the higher the

robbery and homicide rate

Unemployment and delinquency



Hypothesis: Unemployment  poverty  crime



 Adult unemployment effect on delinquency

– Glaser and Rice: adult unemployment reduces delinquency, maybe

because parents are home

– Weatherburn and Lind: delinquency high when adult unemployment

high

 Youth unemployment effect on delinquency

– Several studies report strong positive correlation between

delinquency and youth unemployment

– Ihlanfeldt -- More than 20 percent of difference in property crime

between black and white neighborhoods caused by lack of job

opportunities for youth in the latter

Unemployment and adult crime



 By early 1980’s several studies demonstrated that unemployment and

crime rose and fell together (weak relationship)

 In a 1987 review of 63 studies, Chiricos found a significant positive

relationship between unemployment and crime, especially after 1970

– More unemployment, more crime

– Easier to discover in small units (e.g., cities) because they are more

homogeneous than larger units (e.g., States and regions)

 Disagreeing, Land, McCall and Cohen found the opposite for homicides

– As unemployment increased, homicides decreased!

 Land, Cantor and Russell found a weak negative relationship between

unemployment and crime between 1960-1980

– As unemployment increased, crime decreased

– Agreed that the positive relationship found by Chiricos is more likely

to be found in smaller units of analysis and for property crimes

Unemployment Rate (percent) 1989-2008

ages 16 years and over

Bureau of Labor Statistics

Crime Rates 1989 - 2008

Uniform Crime Reports

Types of jobs and crime



 White – 1970 -1990: decline of manufacturing jobs 

increased poverty and unemployment  increased robberies,

burglaries, drug offenses

– PoliceIssues link - manufacturing jobs

 Shihadeh – 1970 -1990: decline of low-skill jobs  increased

poverty  increased violence

Problems in Interpreting Research on

Economic Conditions

Problem #1: Poverty is subjective



 Relative to locale

 Differently measured

 Unemployment is an unexact concept

– People not actively seeking work are not counted

– Count the under-employed, poorly paid dead-end jobs, bad

working conditions

 How people feel about their jobs is not measured

Problem #2: Economy and crime --

Two contradictory theories, with support for each!



 Traditional view: relationship between economic conditions and crime is negative

(poverty causes crime)

– Good economy, low crime; bad economy, high crime

 Oppositional view: Positive relationship (crime is like any other economic activity)

– Good economy, high crime; bad economy, low crime

 Ploscowe - 1931: support for positive relationship

– Increase of economic well-being during 150-year period accompanied by

increase in crime

– Good economy  greater criminal opportunities  more crime

 Gurr – 1977: support for positive and negative relationships

– Crime actually declined from 1840’s-1930’s

– Later increases may be due to better police reporting

– Different causal process at work in each time frame

 19th. Century - economic activity positively related to crime

 20th. Century - economic “distress” had no effect, but as total productivity

increased, so did crime

Problem #3: Economic change has a delayed

(lagged) effect on crime



 Unemployment takes time to increase crime - unemployed don’t feel

the full brunt of being out of work until other sources of support are

exhausted

 Perhaps there is no corresponding “lag time” for increased

opportunities to commit crime - economic improvement immediately

increases criminal opportunities

 Cantor and Lang - 1946-1982 - US unemployment rates and crime

index

– Immediate “opportunity” effect and lagged “motivation” effect. As

unemployment increased…

 Robbery, burglary and theft immediately decreased but then

increased the next year

 Homicide and auto theft decreased, did not increase the next

year

 No effect on rape and assault

Problem #4: Determining the size of the unit that

economic factors affect



 Local conditions are very important

– In economically stagnant inner cities, there may be declining

amount of legal work and increasing amount of illegal work (e.g.,

dealing drugs)

– Early involvement in crime and incarceration may limit later

opportunities

– Alienation and diminished expectations

– Low-paying work is stigmatized

– Violence substitutes for normal social controls

– Once socialized into illegal activities, people may continue them

Problem #5: Determining which factors cause

crime (problem of multicollinearity)



 High crime areas have many factors that might cause crime

– Poverty

– Unemployment

– Single-parent households

– High density

– Poor schools

 Study by Land - the most important determinants of homicide were

clustered in a single factor: “resource deprivation/affluence”

– This factor includes measures for...

 poverty & income inequality

 percent African-American

 Percent children not living with both parents

Problem #6: Distinguishing between poverty and

economic inequality



 Poverty: below a fixed level of income or material goods

 Inequality: relative deprivation

 Consistent findings

– Economic inequality associated with homicide

– Economic inequality associated with violent crime

 Firearms violence strongly correlated with inequality after

controlling for poverty and access to firearms

 Is it a specific kind of inequality (e.g., white/black)?

– Messner and Golden - 1992 - increased inequality between blacks

and whites associated with homicide

– Other studies report mixed results

Poverty and economic inequality --

Conclusions



 Overall inequality (gap between rich and poor) is associated with

violent crime

 Key factor may not be how many poor, but how many wealthy

– When there are only poor people around, crime may be lower

– Economics may have most direct affect on crime within the urban

“underclass” - pockets of extreme poverty

 Strong association between poverty and violence

 Direct effect of poverty on crime is mediated by many other variables

– High-crime communities have a host of factors - poverty,

unemployment, single-parent households, poor schools

– These factors may be more proximate causes of crime; e.g.



Poverty  poor schools  unemployment  broken homes 

crime



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