Inequality and Crime in Latin America and the Caribbean: New data for an Old Question
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Economía LACEA Journal (e-ISSN: 1533- 6239)
LSE Press
LSE Press
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to revisit the relationship between inequality and crime,
with a focus on the Latin America and Caribbean region. We find a significant, positive,
and robust association between these variables. Moreover, inequality is the only variable
showing this robust regularity. Education levels, economic activity, income per capita, and
poverty show weaker and unstable relationships with crime. With due caution, the use of
historical variables to instrument for inequality in crime regressions suggests that a causal
interpretation of this relationship is plausible. In addition, the analysis of the distribution
of crime victimization indicates that men suffer more crime than women, and that the
male-to-female homicide ratio grows with inequality. By socio-economic strata, highincome
groups suffer more victimization relative to poorer groups in LAC countries, but
the poor suffer more homicides.
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Keywords
Crimen, Crime, Desigualdad social, Inequality, Pobreza, Poverty
