The Impact of the First Professional Police Forces on Crime
Abstract
This paper evaluates how the introduction of professional police forces affected crime using two natural experiments in history: the 1829 formation of the London Metropolitan Police
(the first police force ever tasked with deterring crime) and the 1839 to 1856 county roll-out of
forces in England and Wales. The London Met analysis relies on two complementary data
sources. The first, trial data with geocoded crime locations, allows for a difference-indifferences estimation that finds a significant and persistent reduction in robbery but not
homicide or burglary. A pre-post analysis of the second source, daily police reports of both
cleared and uncleared crime incidents, finds a significant reduction in all violent crimes but
offsetting changes in uncleared (decrease) and cleared (increase) property crimes. These (local) reductions in crime are not just due to crime displacement but represent true decreases in overall crime. Difference-in-difference analyses of the county roll-out find that only sufficiently large forces, measured by the population to force ratio, significantly reduced crime. The results are robust to controlling for spill-over effects of neighboring forces.
Other description
JEL-codes: K42, N93, H00
Collections
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Date
2019-10Author
Bindler, Anna
Hjalmarsson, Randi
Keywords
police
crime
deterrence
economic history
institutions
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
779
Language
eng