Working Paper: NBER ID: w4794
Authors: Ann Dryden Witte; Helen Tauchen
Abstract: In this paper we explore the relationship between crime and work using data for a cohort sample of young men. We find that working and going to school significantly decrease the probability of committing criminal acts and by virtually identical amounts. Parochial school education and higher IQ are also significantly associated with lower criminal proclivities, but a high school degree has no significant effect. These findings, in conjunction with other research, suggest that participation in legitimate activities (employment or school) per se has a greater effect on criminal behavior than does the higher income associated with employment or educational attainment.
Keywords: crime; employment; education; panel data
JEL Codes: J24; K42
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
Employment (J68) | decrease in crime (K14) |
Schooling (I21) | decrease in crime (K14) |
Employment and Schooling (J24) | decrease in crime (K14) |