The news released on Thursday by the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development that Minnesota’s unemployment rate had reached 6.4 percent, prompted Smart Politics to examine how the current jobless trend, and specifically the large rate of job loss, is unprecedented, going back decades in the state.

The problems of increased unemployment, of course, don’t end at the unemployment line. Job loss is perhaps but the tip of an iceberg of other subsequent social problems.

For example, with more and more people out of work, one might logically expect the state to be more vulnerable to higher incidents of violent crime as a result. (The reason being that a loss of jobs in an economic downturn creates more financial hardships, so more people will turn to, say, robbery as a solution for these hardships: robbery, one of the four violent crime measures compiled by the F.B.I. for its violent crime index, has historically comprised about one-third to one-half of all violent crimes committed each year in the state. The other three measures are murder and nonnegligent manslaughter, forcible rape, and aggravated assault).

Such has not been the case in the Gopher State, however. In fact, the numbers are quite startling.

A Smart Politics analysis of trends in unemployment and violent crime rates since 1976 finds there is no positive correlation between the two social ills. In fact, a bivariate correlation conducted of these variables finds they are negatively related (-.553, significant at the .01 level). In other words, increases in the unemployment rate are associated with decreases in the violent crime rate in Minnesota, and vice-versa. Even after a 1-year time lag was added to the model (as crime would not necessarily occur in time with job layoffs), the results were virtually identical (-.564, significant at the .01 level).

If this sounds topsy-turvy, there is some data here that makes sense: unemployment data does, in fact, have a more intuitive association with trends in Minnesota’s gross domestic product (i.e. economic growth). Looking back at yearly trends in both measures to 1976 finds the variables are negatively correlated (-.541, significant at the .01 level). In other words, increases in the rate of GDP are correlated with decreases in unemployment, and vice-versa. Which makes sense: more growth, more jobs, less people out of work. (GDP was curiouslypositively associated with violent crime in Minnesota: .508, significant at the .01 level).

So what happens when these three variables interact together?

Smart Politics conducted a linear regression analysis, using Minnesota’s unemployment and Gross Domestic Product rates as independent variables and violent crime as the dependent variable. The results, surprising as they may be, find that since 1976 an increase of one percentage point in the jobless rate causes a drop in the violent crime rate of 15 incidents per 100,000 people, holding Minnesota’s GDP constant. Thrity-seven percent (R Square = .367) of the variation in violent crime in this model is explained by changes in unemployment and GDP (only inserting unemployment into the regression model explains thirty-one percent of the variation in crime). The model as a whole is highly significant (at the .001 level).

One would expect that if there was not a causal, positive relationship between these variables then there simply might be no relationship at all; many violent crimes (except robbery) are not borne out of problems due to economics and the loss of one’s job, but deep-rooted social and psychological ills. But a negative relationship between unemployment and violent crime – that is something altogether unexpected.

Why would violent crime rates drop during periods of economic hardships? Is Minnesota’s social services system that strong to catch people in its net while they are falling? Or is it a case of Minnesota neighbors helping neighbors in their time of greatest need?

Stay tuned for further research at Smart Politics to examine these issues. Coming next: an analysis of property crime and unemployment data.

Minnesota Unemployment, Violent Crime, and GDP, 1976-2007

Year
Unemployment rate
Violent Crime rate
Gross Domestic Product
2007
4.6
288.7
254,970
2006
4.1
312.0
242,095
2005
4.2
297.3
232,001
2004
4.6
269.8
223,454
2003
4.9
262.9
208,179
2002
4.5
267.2
198,558
2001
3.9
263.7
190,231
2000
3.1
280.8
185,093
1999
2.8
274.0
172,874
1998
2.7
310.2
164,897
1997
3.3
337.8
155,938
1996
3.9
338.8
141,664
1995
3.7
356.1
131,357
1994
4.1
359.0
124,733
1993
4.9
327.2
114,946
1992
5.1
338.0
111,919
1991
5.2
316.0
103,791
1990
4.8
306.1
100,327
1989
4.3
288.3
96,165
1988
4.3
290.1
89,991
1987
5.1
285.4
83,947
1986
5.6
284.6
78,194
1985
6.0
256.4
74,808
1984
6.3
211.5
70,296
1983
8.0
190.9
61,029
1982
8.1
219.3
56,952
1981
5.7
228.5
54,966
1980
5.9
227.8
49,717
1979
4.3
221.0
46,353
1978
4.0
189.6
41,126
1977
5.3
193.8
36,380
1976
5.9
189.0
32,610

Minnesota Unemployment Rate: seasonally adjusted (Source: data compiled from the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development).
Minnesota Violent Crime Rate: per 100,000 inhabitants (Source: FBI Uniform Crime Reports).
Minnesota Gross Domestic Product: in millions of current dollars, all industries total (Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce).

6 Comments

  1. Rich Goldsmith on December 23, 2008 at 10:15 am

    I actually did a post on this subject recently here. The SAFE officers I spoke with mentioned that robberies drop because there’s less cash available, making the crime less worthwhile since the criminal is less likely to score a significant amount.

    However, burglaries are NOT included in the violent crime index, and those are on the rise right now. Prostitution is another crime that tends to experience upswings in hard economic times.

    Lastly, I think the exercise is interesting, but there’s some oversimplification going on here. Take the ’01-’03 recession, for example. Crime was highest during the recovery period — ’05-’06. However, crime tends to lag recessions, especially in modern times when state and municipal budgets get cut as a result of deficits. In ’05-’06, the crime rate skyrocketing was a direct result of public safety budgets getting slashed. And there’s a much more direct correlation there than with unemployment.

    I’d be curious to see if that holds true in other years as well, or if it’s something that has only come into play in the last decade or two.

  2. Eric Ostermeier on December 23, 2008 at 11:47 am

    > However, crime tends to lag recessions, especially in
    > modern times when state and municipal budgets get cut as > a result of deficits.

    Right – that’s why I also ran the #s with a 1-year time lag as well. Moreover, even without the lag, these numbers are aggregated yearly, which should give us more of a chance to see the impact of joblessness and the economy on crime, as opposed to using the month-to-month data which is also available.

  3. Rich Goldsmith on December 23, 2008 at 12:37 pm

    I’m thinking the 1 year lag may not be enough, however. The recession officially ended around late ’03/early ’04, for example, but ’06 had the highest violent crime rate (and property crime rate) for that era. And I tend to believe that it’s less tied to unemployment dropping than it is a shortage of cops/enforcement/prevention programs over the two or three year period combined. Budget allocations for public safety and human services really only started catching up in ’06/’07.

  4. Eric Ostermeier on December 23, 2008 at 12:44 pm

    > And I tend to believe that it’s less tied to unemployment
    > dropping than it is a shortage of cops/enforcement/prevention
    > programs over the two or three year period combined.

    Ah, I see. There is no doubt this initial model i put forth is far from explaining the multi-varied reasons for the ebbs and flows of crime. Many long reports, dissertations, and books have been written about that. And that is why i raised the issue (3rd to last paragraph) that some would feel there should be little relationship of unemployment to crime. What this blog highlights is a counterintuitive negative relationship; and i guess what you are suggesting is that this result is either a random by-product of some odd data, or odd use of data, that simply the data hasn’t been lagged properly. In no way was this entry meant, however, to provide a definitive model as to the causes of the fluctuation in crime rates.

  5. Rich Goldsmith on December 23, 2008 at 2:18 pm

    No question, and I didn’t think that’s how you presented it. I just find it to be an interesting discussion. Obviously, since I took the time to write about it (albeit in a less mathematical fashion) over at Secrets of the City.

  6. Karl Davis on December 26, 2008 at 5:23 pm

    MN saw a large population increase in the 1990s due to people coming here for social services. As a result it is only natural that you will get more individuals who might do crime based on population growth alone. The violent crime rate for much of the 1990s somewhat backs this idea up.
    It is possible the reason the crime rate isn’t so high the last eight years is because people arrested for crime in the 90s are serving their prison sentences. This could also explain a surge of crime one year and a drop a few years later.
    Any increase in future crime should be compared to incarceration and/or prison release trends and not solely economic changes.

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