Impatience and crime. Evidence from the NLSY97
Impatience and crime. Evidence from the NLSY97
We empirically test the relationship between crime and impatience at the individual level, exploiting data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 (NLSY97). Besides providing information on violent, property, and drug crimes, NLSY97 allows us to observe different behaviors, sharing impatience as a common latent factor. We use factor analysis to extract this common factor as a measure of impatience. Estimates from a Logit model suggest a positive association between impatience and crime. This relationship differs across violent, property, and drug crimes, but we do not find significant heterogeneities when comparing individuals according to gender, parental education, and ethnic groups. The main result is robust to different factor analysis specifications and controls for risk preferences. Our findings support policies aimed at influencing individual time preferences as an indirect way to combat crime.
Factor analysis, Impatience, NLSY97, Property crime, Time preferences, Violent crime
Basiglio, Stefania
70b367cc-0ab7-4469-9d78-81395b6fccdc
Foresta, Alessandra
aaf8f667-e9bb-410d-bedc-da9bd6fff3bc
Turati, Gilberto
c7c4f698-229e-42ee-8cba-0f6d7062e1a2
22 February 2024
Basiglio, Stefania
70b367cc-0ab7-4469-9d78-81395b6fccdc
Foresta, Alessandra
aaf8f667-e9bb-410d-bedc-da9bd6fff3bc
Turati, Gilberto
c7c4f698-229e-42ee-8cba-0f6d7062e1a2
Basiglio, Stefania, Foresta, Alessandra and Turati, Gilberto
(2024)
Impatience and crime. Evidence from the NLSY97.
Journal of Economic Psychology, 101, [102711].
(doi:10.1016/j.joep.2024.102711).
Abstract
We empirically test the relationship between crime and impatience at the individual level, exploiting data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 (NLSY97). Besides providing information on violent, property, and drug crimes, NLSY97 allows us to observe different behaviors, sharing impatience as a common latent factor. We use factor analysis to extract this common factor as a measure of impatience. Estimates from a Logit model suggest a positive association between impatience and crime. This relationship differs across violent, property, and drug crimes, but we do not find significant heterogeneities when comparing individuals according to gender, parental education, and ethnic groups. The main result is robust to different factor analysis specifications and controls for risk preferences. Our findings support policies aimed at influencing individual time preferences as an indirect way to combat crime.
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Accepted/In Press date: 17 February 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 February 2024
Published date: 22 February 2024
Keywords:
Factor analysis, Impatience, NLSY97, Property crime, Time preferences, Violent crime
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 488585
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488585
ISSN: 0167-4870
PURE UUID: 6dfbdcdf-d35c-444e-a6d2-51973b0efc92
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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2024 17:49
Last modified: 28 Mar 2024 03:06
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Contributors
Author:
Stefania Basiglio
Author:
Alessandra Foresta
Author:
Gilberto Turati
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