We consider a model of crime with rational Bayesian Jurors. We find that if jurors are not perfectly informed, even when there is no limit to the size of the punishment that can be imposed, it is not possible to deter all crime. There is a finite lower bound on the crime rate which results from the difficulties in achieving a conviction with imperfect evidence and very low crime rates. Crime can not be reduced below this rate by increasing the penalty, but the lower bound can be decreased by improving the quality of evidence presented to jurors, or by increasing the threshold of evidence necessary for prosecution
This paper develops a normative model of optimal sanctions in the Becker Tradition which emphasizes ...
The deterrent effect of capital punishment has been debated in scholarly and policy circles for at ...
The Becker proposition (BP) is one of the founding pillars of the modern literature on Law and Econo...
We consider a model of crime with rational Bayesian Jurors. We find that if jurors are not perfectly...
The economic literature on crime and punishment focuses on the trade-off between probability and sev...
Decision makers who confront a long sequence of criminal opportunities act differently from those wh...
Two real-world observations are not easily replicated in models of crime. First, although capital pu...
This paper extends Malik's (1990) analysis to the case where criminals' avoidance efforts and public...
In this paper we analyze criminal deterrence in the presence of specific psychic costs of punishment...
Increasing penalty structures for repeat offenses are ubiquitous in penal codes, despite little emp...
This paper extends Malik's (1990) analysis to the case where criminals' avoidance efforts and public...
Abstract It has sometimes been argued that one way to reduce the costs of law enforcement would be t...
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the optimal enforcement of the penal code when criminals...
In a seminal paper, Becker (1968) showed that the most efficient way to deter crime is to impose the...
The trade-off between the immediate returns from committing a crime and the future costs of punishme...
This paper develops a normative model of optimal sanctions in the Becker Tradition which emphasizes ...
The deterrent effect of capital punishment has been debated in scholarly and policy circles for at ...
The Becker proposition (BP) is one of the founding pillars of the modern literature on Law and Econo...
We consider a model of crime with rational Bayesian Jurors. We find that if jurors are not perfectly...
The economic literature on crime and punishment focuses on the trade-off between probability and sev...
Decision makers who confront a long sequence of criminal opportunities act differently from those wh...
Two real-world observations are not easily replicated in models of crime. First, although capital pu...
This paper extends Malik's (1990) analysis to the case where criminals' avoidance efforts and public...
In this paper we analyze criminal deterrence in the presence of specific psychic costs of punishment...
Increasing penalty structures for repeat offenses are ubiquitous in penal codes, despite little emp...
This paper extends Malik's (1990) analysis to the case where criminals' avoidance efforts and public...
Abstract It has sometimes been argued that one way to reduce the costs of law enforcement would be t...
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the optimal enforcement of the penal code when criminals...
In a seminal paper, Becker (1968) showed that the most efficient way to deter crime is to impose the...
The trade-off between the immediate returns from committing a crime and the future costs of punishme...
This paper develops a normative model of optimal sanctions in the Becker Tradition which emphasizes ...
The deterrent effect of capital punishment has been debated in scholarly and policy circles for at ...
The Becker proposition (BP) is one of the founding pillars of the modern literature on Law and Econo...