Inside the ‘Black Box’ of the Nexus Between Economic Conditions and Crime: Can the Relationship Be Mitigated?

Article


Asllani, A., Goulas, E. and Karidis, S. 2025. Inside the ‘Black Box’ of the Nexus Between Economic Conditions and Crime: Can the Relationship Be Mitigated? Kyklos: International Review for Social Sciences. p. In press. https://doi.org/10.1111/kykl.12459
AuthorsAsllani, A., Goulas, E. and Karidis, S.
Abstract

This study examines how the impact of economic conditions on criminal activity is mitigated by the presence of labour market policies and that of a sizeable shadow economy. The analysis reveals a positive relationship between economic downturns and property crime, supporting the well-documented idea that economic hardships intensify criminal activity. Most importantly, however, we find that the relationship is mitigated when active labour market policies, as well as labour training, are employed by enhancing skills and productivity, thus lowering incentives for criminal behaviour. Passive policies, on the other hand, also weaken the link, primarily through the income effect, with their effectiveness being increased in the presence of high levels of the shadow economy. High levels of both kinds of labour market policies and of the shadow economy significantly reduce crime, though additional investment in those shows different returns. These findings suggest that a comprehensive approach is required when effective crime reduction is considered during economic downturns, accounting for both formal and informal sector dynamics.

JournalKyklos: International Review for Social Sciences
Journal citationp. In press
ISSN0023-5962
1467-6435
Year2025
PublisherWiley
Accepted author manuscript
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Repository staff only
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Anyone
Supplemental file
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Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/kykl.12459
Publication dates
Online15 Apr 2025
Publication process dates
Deposited22 Apr 2025
Accepted31 Mar 2025
Copyright holder© 2025 The Authors
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