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What causes violent crime?

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000100474.pdf (2.299Mb)
Date
1998-07-21
Author
Loayza, Norman
Metadata
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Abstract
This study uses a new data set of crime ratesfor a large sample of countriesfor the period 1970- 1994, based on information from the United Nations World Crime Surveys, to ana/yze the determinants ofnational homicide and robbery rates. A simple model of the incentives to commit crimes is proposed, which explicit/y considers possible causes of the persistence of crime over time (criminal inertia). Several econometric mode/s are estimated, attempting to capture the . determinonts of crime rates across countries and over time. The empirical mode/s are first run for cross-sections and then applie'd to panel data. The former focus on erplanatory variables that do not change markedly over time, while the panel data techniques consider both the eflect of the business cyc1e (i.e., GDP growth rate) on the crime rate and criminal inertia (accountedfor by the inclusion of the /agged crime rate as an explanatory variable). The panel data techniques a/so consider country-specific eflects, the joint endogeneity of some of the erplanatory variables, and lhe existence of some types of measurement e'ors aJjlicting the crime data. The results showthat increases in income inequality raise crime rates, dete'ence eflects are significant, crime tends to be counter-cyclical, and criminal inertia is significant even after controlling for other potential determinants of homicide and robbery rates.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10438/12228
Collections
  • FGV EPGE - Seminários de Pesquisa Econômica [427]
Knowledge Areas
Economia
Subject
Criminologia - Modelos econométricos
Keyword

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