Organizational Structure, Police Activity and Crime

Itai Ater (Tel Aviv University)
Yehonatan Givati (Hebrew University)
Oren Rigbi (Ben Gurion University)

Abstract: We examine the consequences of an organizational reform in Israel that transferred the responsibility for housing arrestees from the Police to the Prison Authority. Using the staggered rollout of the reform in di fferent regions of the country, we document strong evidence that this organizational change led to an increase of 11 percent in the number of arrests and to a decrease of 4 percent in the number of reported crimes, with these eff ects concentrated in more minor crimes. The reform also led to a decrease in the quality of arrests, measured by the likelihood of being charged following an arrest. These findings are consistent with the idea that the reform externalized the cost of housing arrestees from the Police's perspective, and therefore led the Police to increase its activity against crime.


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