Less Crime May Be Worse

By Brendan O'Flaherty

Department of Economics
Columbia University
New York, NY 10027

December 1993


Abstract

The probability of being a crime victim, conditional on engaging in risky activity, acts like a tax on the risky activity. The higher the probability, the greater the loss to potential victims in consumer surplus. Higher conditional probabilities, however, to not always increase actual crime; sometimes the decrease in risky activity more than offsets the increase in conditional probability. Under these circumstances, less crime is associated with greater welfare loss.

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