Determinants of Crime Rates in Latin America and the World: An Empirical AssessmentWorld Bank Publications, 1998 M01 1 - 44 pages A growing concern in most regions of the world is the heightened incidence of criminal and violent behavior, especially in the Latin American and Caribbean Region. This study uses a new data set of crime rates for a large sample of countries to analyze the determinants of national homicide and robbery rates. The authors describe a simple model of "incentives to commit crimes" by estimating several econometric models and utilizing empirical models to draw their conclusions. |
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... significant , crime tends to be counter - cyclical , and criminal inertia is significant even after controlling for other potential determinants of homicide and robbery rates . INTRODUCTION A GROWING CONCERN ACROSS THE WORLD is the ...
... significant , crime tends to be counter - cyclical , and criminal inertia is significant even after controlling for other potential determinants of homicide and robbery rates . INTRODUCTION A GROWING CONCERN ACROSS THE WORLD is the ...
Page 2
... significant . Contrary to our expectations , national enrollment rates in secondary education and the average number ... significantly associated with higher crime rates . Regarding dynamic effects , we find that the homicide rate rises ...
... significant . Contrary to our expectations , national enrollment rates in secondary education and the average number ... significantly associated with higher crime rates . Regarding dynamic effects , we find that the homicide rate rises ...
Page 4
... significant rela- tionship between the average number of school years completed by the adult population ( over 25 years ) and particularly property crimes committed across the U.S. in 1960. Four possible explana- tions of this puzzling ...
... significant rela- tionship between the average number of school years completed by the adult population ( over 25 years ) and particularly property crimes committed across the U.S. in 1960. Four possible explana- tions of this puzzling ...
Page 15
... significant producer of any illegal drug in any of the issues of the U.S. Department of State's International Narcotics Control Strategy Report which has been published on an annual basis since 1986 . Regarding the negative incentives ...
... significant producer of any illegal drug in any of the issues of the U.S. Department of State's International Narcotics Control Strategy Report which has been published on an annual basis since 1986 . Regarding the negative incentives ...
Page 19
... significant in all the regressions , reveal- ing that countries with more unequal distribu- tions of income tend to have higher crime rates than those with more egalitarian patterns of income distribution . In addition , regression ( 2 ) ...
... significant in all the regressions , reveal- ing that countries with more unequal distribu- tions of income tend to have higher crime rates than those with more egalitarian patterns of income distribution . In addition , regression ( 2 ) ...
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Common terms and phrases
Asia Dummy average Caribbean coefficient Colombia commit a crime common religion conviction rate crime industry criminal activity criminal behavior criminal inertia cross-sectional regressions death penalty decision to commit determinants of crime deterrence effects Developing Countries DiCristina Drug Possession Crimes Drug Producers Dummy Dummy for Developing econometric Ehrlich empirical error term Europe and Central explanatory variables GDP growth rate Gini Coefficient Gini index GNP per Capita Guyana homicide and robbery incidence income inequality increase individual individual's instruments Intentional Homicide Rates joint endogeneity lagged crime rate lagged homicide rate largest number Latin America level of education Loayza Log of GNP measurement errors mis-measurement national crime rates Number of Observations p-value panel data police population Possession Crimes Rate proxy reported crime robbery rates Sargan Secondary Enrollment Rate serially correlated Shahid Javed Burki significant statistically strictly exogenous Sub-Saharan Africa tion under-reporting United Nations unobserved country-specific effects urbanization rate World Bank World Crime Surveys
References to this book
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An Introduction to Sustainable Development Peter P. Rogers,Kazi F. Jalal,John A. Boyd Limited preview - 2012 |