The Causal Effect of Military Conscription on Crime and the Labor Market
Abstract
This paper uses detailed individual register data to identify the causal effect of mandatory
peacetime military conscription in Sweden on the lives of young men born in the 1970s and 80s. Because draftees are positively selected into service based on their draft board test
performance, our primary identification strategy uses the random assignment of potential
conscripts to draft board officiators who have relatively high or low tendencies to place
draftees into service in an instrumental variable framework. We find that military service
significantly increases post-service crime (overall and across multiple crime categories)
between ages 23 and 30. These results are driven primarily by young men with pre-service
criminal histories and who come from low socioeconomic status households. Though we find evidence of an incapacitation effect concurrent with conscription, it is unfortunately not enough to break a cycle of crime that has already begun prior to service. Analyses of labor
market outcomes tell similar post-service stories: individuals from disadvantaged
backgrounds have significantly lower income, and are more likely to receive unemployment
and welfare benefits, as a result of service, while service significantly increases income and
does not impact welfare and unemployment for those at the other end of the distribution.
Finally, we provide suggestive evidence that peer effects may play an important role in
explaining the unintended negative impacts of military service.
Other description
JEL: H56, J08, K42
Collections
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Date
2016-02Author
Hjalmarsson, Randi
Lindquist, Matthew J.
Keywords
Conscription
Crime
Criminal Behavior
Draft
Military Conscription
Military Draft
Incapacitation
Labor Market
Unemployment
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
645
Language
eng