Scaring or scarring? Labour market effects of criminal victimisation
Abstract
Little is known about the costs of crime to victims and their families. In this paper, we
use unique and detailed register data on victimisations and labour market outcomes from
the Netherlands to overcome data restrictions previously met in the literature and estimate
event-study designs to assess the short- and long-term effects of criminal victimisation.
Our results show significant decreases in earnings (6.6-9.3%) and increases in the days of
benefit receipt (10.4-14.7%) which are lasting up to eight years after victimisation. We
find shorter-lived responses in health expenditure. Additional analyses suggest that the
victimisation can be interpreted as an escalation point, potentially triggering subsequent
adverse life-events which contribute to its persistent impact. Heterogeneity analyses show
that the effects are slightly larger for males regarding earnings and significantly larger for
females regarding benefits. These differences appear to be largely (but not completely)
driven by different offence characteristics. Lastly, we investigate spill-over effects on nonvictimised partners and find evidence for a spill-over effect of violent threat on the partner’s earnings.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Other description
JEL-codes: K14; J01; J12; I1
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2019-01Author
Bindler, Anna
Ketel, Nadine
Keywords
crime
victimisation
labour market outcomes
event-study design
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
749
Language
eng