Criminals and the Price System: Evidence from Czech Metal Thieves

Tomas Brabenec (University of Economics, Prague)
Josef Montag (Mendel University)

Abstract: This paper estimates the elasticity of the supply of offenses with respect to the gains from crime. People steal copper and other nonferrous metals to sell them to a scrap yard. Simultaneously, the prices at scrap yards are set at the world market. We argue, that shocks in metal prices represent a quasi-experimental variation in gains from crime. This allows us to estimate behavioral parameters of supply of offenses and test the economic theory of criminal behavior. Our estimates suggest that the long-run elasticity of supply of metal thefts with respect to the re-sale value of stolen metal is between unity and 1.5. Moreover, the system tends to equilibriate quickly — between 30 and 60 percent of a disequilibrium is corrected the following month and the monthly price elasticity estimates are between 0.9 and unity.


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