1 / 15

Instrumenting Police Levels with Federal Law Enforcement Spending: An Assessment of Recent Efforts

Instrumenting Police Levels with Federal Law Enforcement Spending: An Assessment of Recent Efforts. John L. Worrall Tomislav V. Kovandzic. Police Levels and Crime. Police levels may be endogenous Reverse causality Methods of dealing with (or skirting) endogeneity

cybele
Download Presentation

Instrumenting Police Levels with Federal Law Enforcement Spending: An Assessment of Recent Efforts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Instrumenting Police Levels with Federal Law Enforcement Spending: An Assessment of Recent Efforts John L. Worrall Tomislav V. Kovandzic

  2. Police Levels and Crime • Police levels may be endogenous • Reverse causality • Methods of dealing with (or skirting) endogeneity • Time series w/ lagged police • Time series w/ creative interventions (e.g., terror alert levels—Klick and Tabarrok, 2005) • Granger causality test • IV Regression • Need instrument(s) for police levels

  3. Review of Non-spending Instruments • Levitt (1997) • Electoral cycles • Levitt (2002) • Firefighters • Cornwell and Trumbull (2004) • Offense ratios and tax revenues • Other studies • Various combinations of demographic variables

  4. Federal Spending (Grants) Instruments • GAO (2005) • 7 instruments (Hiring, MORE, Innovative COPS grants, Misc. COPS grants, Byrne, LLEBG, Non-cops grants) • Overidentified • Evans and Owens (2007) • “paid officers granted” instrument = .75*UHP + CIS • Just identified

  5. Instrument Requirements • Two requirements for “good” instruments • Relevance (correlated with endogenous variable) • Significant in first stage regressions & joint F-stat. > 10 (Staiger & Stock, 1997) • Validity (independent of error process in main equation) • Hansen’s J (Hansen, 1982)

  6. Our Contribution • Research questions • Do federal law enforcement grants make “good” (i.e., relevant & valid) instruments? • Are police levels associated with crime? • Answer to question 2 • Yes and no • Hiring instruments are better (generally relevant & valid) • Other federal grants make weak instruments • Answer to question 2 • Yes, but not as much as previously estimated

  7. Data • Data • Panel of 5,199 cities, 1990-2001 • Dependent—7 index crimes (cleaned) • Independent • Police levels, UHP, CIS, DNP, Hiring, MORE, Innovative COPS grants, Misc. COPS grants, Byrne, LLEBG, Non-cops grants (grant draw-downs) • Income, Nonwhite, Under 24, Unemployment (county) • Unit and year dummies

  8. Estimation Procedure • Analysis • GMM Models w/ -xtivreg2- in Stata • Analysis in levels & rates per 10,000 or percentages • Instruments lagged one period for delayed effect • Robust std. errors w/ corrections for state-level clustering • Models • Hiring grants (roughly in line with Evans and Owens) • UHP, DNP, CIS • All federal law enforcement grants (GAO’s focus) • Hiring, MORE, Innovative COPS grants, Misc. COPS grants, Byrne, LLEBG, Non-cops grants

  9. First Stage, Hiring Instruments

  10. Endogenous Police (Hiring Instruments)

  11. First Stage, Federal Grant Instruments

  12. Endogenous Police (Federal Grant Instruments)

  13. First Stage, UHP & Lagged Police Instruments

  14. Endogenous Police (UHP and Lagged Police Instruments)

  15. Conclusion • Be cautious with grants as instruments • Grants may be correlated w/ unobservables (heterogeneity in grant-getting); lagged police may temper that effect

More Related