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Impact of Drug Addiction on Criminal Earnings (From Quantitative Explorations in Drug Abuse Policy, P 55-71, 1980, Irving Leveson, ed.)

NCJ Number
155035
Author(s)
D Coate; F Goldman
Date Published
1980
Length
17 pages
Annotation
This paper presents an empirical analysis of the extent to which the consumption of illicit drugs leads to income-generating criminal activity.
Abstract
The analysis particularly emphasizes the relationship between drug expenditures and earnings from crimes other than drug trafficking offenses. The model consists of four structural equations and four endogenous or jointly determined variables, which include income from selling drugs, income from all other criminal activity, income from legal activities, and dollar size of drug consumption. The evidence vis-a-vis the impact of drug abuse on criminal activity is considerably more subtle than suggested by previous research. In fact, the most significant relationship shows that criminal earnings being spent on drugs of abuse dominates the interdependency between drug use and crime. The impact of drug use on criminal activity is even less when other sources of income are considered. 4 tables, 9 notes, and 18 references

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