TY - JOUR AU - Dills, Angela K AU - Miron, Jeffrey A AU - Summers, Garrett TI - What Do Economists Know About Crime? JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 13759 PY - 2008 Y2 - January 2008 DO - 10.3386/w13759 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13759 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13759.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Angela K. Dills Western Carolina University 1 University Way Cullowhee, NC 28723 E-Mail: angeladills@gmail.com Jeffrey A. Miron Department of Economics Harvard University Cambridge, MA 02138 Tel: 781/856-0086 Fax: 617/495-8570 E-Mail: miron@fas.harvard.edu Garrett Summers Department of Economics Harvard University Cambridge, MA 02138 E-Mail: no email available M1 - published as Angela K. Dills, Jeffrey A. Miron, Garrett Summers. "What Do Economists Know about Crime?," in Rafael Di Tella, Sebastian Edwards, and Ernesto Schargrodsky, editors, "The Economics of Crime: Lessons for and from Latin America" University of Chicago Press (2010) AB - In this paper we evaluate what economists have learned over the past 40 years about the determinants of crime. We base our evaluation on two kinds of evidence: an examination of aggregate data over long time periods and across countries, and a critical review of the literature. We argue that economists know little about the empirically relevant determinants of crime. Even hypotheses that find some support in U.S. data for recent decades are inconsistent with data over longer horizons or across countries. This conclusion applies both to policy variables like arrest rates or capital punishment and to less conventional factors such as abortion or gun laws. The hypothesis that drug prohibition generates violence, however, is generally consistent with the long times-series and cross-country facts. This analysis is also consistent with a broader perspective in which government policies that affect the nature and amount of dispute resolution play an important role in determining violence. ER -