Submitted manuscript, 195 KB, PDF document
Research output: Working paper
Research output: Working paper
}
TY - UNPB
T1 - The abortion-crime link: evidence from England and Wales
AU - Kahane, L H
AU - Paton, D
AU - Simmons, R
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - We use panel data from 1983 to 1997 for the 42 police force areas in England and Wales to test the hypothesis that legalizing abortion contributes to lower crime rates. We provide an advance on previous work by focusing on the impact of possible endogeneity of effective abortion rates with respect to crime. Our use of U.K. data allows us to exploit regional differences in the provision of free abortions to identify abortion rates. When we use a similar model and estimation methodology, we are able to replicate the negative association between abortion rates and reported crime found by Donohue and Levitt for the U.S. However, when we allow for the potential endogeneity of effective abortion rates with respect to crime, we find no clear connection between the two.
AB - We use panel data from 1983 to 1997 for the 42 police force areas in England and Wales to test the hypothesis that legalizing abortion contributes to lower crime rates. We provide an advance on previous work by focusing on the impact of possible endogeneity of effective abortion rates with respect to crime. Our use of U.K. data allows us to exploit regional differences in the provision of free abortions to identify abortion rates. When we use a similar model and estimation methodology, we are able to replicate the negative association between abortion rates and reported crime found by Donohue and Levitt for the U.S. However, when we allow for the potential endogeneity of effective abortion rates with respect to crime, we find no clear connection between the two.
KW - abortion
KW - crime
KW - fertility
M3 - Working paper
T3 - Economics Working Paper Series
BT - The abortion-crime link: evidence from England and Wales
PB - The Department of Economics
CY - Lancaster University
ER -