Economic Shocks and Crime: Evidence from the Crash of Ponzi Schemes

Working papers in socioeconomic research

Economic Shocks and Crime: Evidence from the Crash of Ponzi Schemes

Publication date: 2016-03-14

Authors: Cortés, Darwin ; Santamaría, Julieth ; Vargas, Juan

In November 2008, Colombian authorities dismantled a network of Ponzi schemes, making hundreds of thousands of investors lose tens of millions of dollars throughout the country. Using original data on the geographical incidence of the Ponzi schemes, this paper estimates the impact of their break down on crime. We find that the crash of Ponzi schemes differentially exacerbated crime in affected districts. Confirming the intuition of the standard economic model of crime, this effect is only present in places with relatively weak judicial and law enforcement institutions, and with little access to consumption smoothing mechanisms such as microcredit. In addition, we show that, with the exception of economically-motivated felonies such as robbery, violent crime is not affected by the negative shock.

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Technical sheet

Language: en

Country / Region: Colombia

Format: pdf

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Cite publication

Cortés, Darwin; Santamaría, Julieth; Vargas, Juan. (2016). Economic Shocks and Crime: Evidence from the Crash of Ponzi Schemes. Caracas: CAF

Authors

Cortés, Darwin

No. of publications 2

Santamaría, Julieth

No. of publications 1

Vargas, Juan

No. of publications 12

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