—
2
.0
32
(.
01
3)
(.
00
9)
(.
00
8)
(.0
09
)
A
ge
=
23
—
2
.0
31
—
2
.0
26
—
2
.0
15
—
2
.0
30
(.
02
3)
(.
01
3)
(.
01
1)
(.0
13
)
A
ge
=
24
—
2
.0
27
—
2
.0
16
—
2
.0
24
—
2
.0
47
(.
04
0)
(.
02
0)
(.
01
9)
(.0
18
)
R
2
.9
72
.9
72
.9
85
.9
85
.9
67
.9
68
.9
84
.9
84
N
u
m
be
r
of
ob
se
rv
at
io
n
s
5,
73
7
5,
73
7
5,
73
7
5,
73
7
5,
74
0
5,
74
0
5,
74
0
5,
74
0
S
ta
te
-
xe
d
ef
fe
ct
s
or
S
ta
te
-a
ge
in
te
ra
ct
io
ns
?
S
ta
te
-
xe
d
S
ta
te
-
xe
d
S
ta
te
p
A
ge
in
te
ra
ct
io
ns
S
ta
te
p
A
ge
in
te
ra
ct
io
n
s
S
ta
te
-
xe
d
S
ta
te
-
xe
d
S
ta
te
p
A
ge
in
te
ra
ct
io
n
s
S
ta
te
p
A
ge
in
te
ra
ct
io
n
s
R
es
ul
ts
in
th
e
ta
bl
e
ar
e
co
ef
ci
en
ts
fr
om
es
ti
m
at
io
n
of
eq
ua
ti
on
(3
).
T
he
un
it
of
ob
se
rv
at
io
n
in
th
e
re
gr
es
si
on
is
an
nu
al
ar
re
st
s
by
st
at
e
by
si
ng
le
ye
ar
of
ag
e.
T
he
sa
m
pl
e
co
ve
rs
th
e
pe
ri
od
19
85
–1
99
6
fo
r
ag
es
15
–2
4.
T
he
ab
or
ti
on
ra
te
fo
r
a
co
ho
rt
of
ag
e
a
in
st
at
e
s
in
ye
ar
y
is
th
e
nu
m
be
r
of
ab
or
ti
on
s
pe
r
10
00
liv
e
bi
rt
hs
in
st
at
e
s
in
ye
ar
y
2
a
2
1.
N
ot
e
th
at
th
is
is
th
e
ac
tu
al
ab
or
ti
on
ra
te
,r
at
he
r
th
an
th
e
“e
ff
ec
ti
ve
”
ab
or
ti
on
ra
te
us
ed
in
pr
ec
ed
in
g
ta
bl
es
.T
he
re
fo
re
,t
he
co
ef
ci
en
ts
in
th
is
ta
bl
e
ar
e
no
t
di
re
ct
ly
co
m
pa
ra
bl
e
to
th
os
e
of
ea
rl
ie
r
ta
bl
es
.I
f
da
ta
w
er
e
av
ai
la
bl
e
fo
r
al
ls
ta
te
s,
ye
ar
s,
an
d
ag
es
,t
he
to
ta
ln
um
be
r
of
ob
se
rv
at
io
ns
w
ou
ld
be
61
20
.D
ue
to
m
is
si
ng
ar
re
st
da
ta
an
d
oc
ca
si
on
al
ze
ro
va
lu
es
fo
r
ar
re
st
s,
th
e
ac
tu
al
nu
m
be
r
of
ob
se
rv
at
io
ns
is
so
m
ew
ha
ts
m
al
le
r.
A
co
m
pl
et
e
se
t
of
ye
ar
-b
ir
th
co
ho
rt
in
te
ra
ct
io
ns
ar
e
in
cl
ud
ed
in
al
ls
pe
ci
ca
ti
on
s
to
ca
pt
ur
e
na
ti
on
al
ch
an
ge
s
in
th
e
sh
ap
e
of
th
e
ag
e-
cr
im
e
pr
o
le
ov
er
ti
m
e.
S
ta
te
-y
ea
r
in
te
ra
ct
io
ns
ar
e
al
so
in
cl
ud
ed
.S
om
e
sp
ec
i
ca
ti
on
s
in
cl
ud
e
st
at
e-
xe
d
ef
fe
ct
s;
in
ot
he
r
sp
ec
i
ca
ti
on
s,
a
co
m
pl
et
e
se
to
fs
ta
te
-a
ge
in
te
ra
ct
io
ns
is
in
cl
ud
ed
.E
st
im
at
io
n
is
w
ei
gh
te
d
le
as
ts
qu
ar
es
,
w
it
h
w
ei
gh
ts
de
te
rm
in
ed
by
to
ta
ls
ta
te
po
pu
la
ti
on
.S
ta
nd
ar
d
er
ro
rs
ha
ve
be
en
co
rr
ec
te
d
to
ac
co
un
tf
or
co
rr
el
at
io
n
ov
er
ti
m
e
w
it
hi
n
a
gi
ve
n
bi
rt
h
co
ho
rt
in
a
pa
rt
ic
ul
ar
st
at
e.
Su
ch
a
co
rr
ec
ti
on
is
ne
ce
ss
ar
y
be
ca
us
e
th
e
ab
or
ti
on
ra
te
fo
r
an
y
gi
ve
n
co
ho
rt
is
xe
d
ov
er
ti
m
e,
bu
t
m
ul
ti
pl
e
ob
se
rv
at
io
ns
co
rr
es
po
nd
in
g
to
di
ffe
re
nt
ye
ar
s
of
ag
e
ar
e
in
cl
ud
ed
in
th
e
re
gr
es
si
on
.R
es
ul
ts
fo
r
m
ur
de
r
ar
e
no
t
in
cl
ud
ed
in
th
e
ta
bl
e
be
ca
us
e
m
ur
de
r
is
in
fr
eq
ue
nt
,l
ea
di
ng
to
m
an
y
ze
ro
s
w
he
n
an
al
yz
ed
at
th
e
le
ve
lo
f
st
at
e
an
d
si
ng
le
ye
ar
of
ag
e.
413
LEGALIZED ABORTION AND CRIME
VI. C
ONCLUSION
We know that teenagers, unmarried women, and poor women
are most likely to deem a pregnancy to be either mistimed or
unwanted, and that a large proportion of these unintended preg-
nancies will be terminated through abortion.
36
According to a
recent National Academy report, there appears to be “a causal
and adverse effect of early childbearing on the health and social
and economic well-being of children; this effect is over and above
the important effects of background disadvantages” [Institute of
Medicine 1995, p. 58]. Moreover, unintended pregnancies are
associated with poorer prenatal care, greater smoking and drink-
ing during pregnancy, and lower birthweights. Consequently, the
life chances of children who are born only because their mothers
could not have an abortion are considerably dampened relative to
babies who were wanted at the time of conception. The drop in the
proportion of unwanted births during the 1970s and early 1980s
appears to be the result of the increasing availability and resort
to abortion.
The evidence we present is consistent with legalized abortion
reducing crime rates with a twenty-year lag. Our results suggest
that an increase of 100 abortions per 1000 live births reduces a
cohort’s crime by roughly 10 percent. Extrapolating our results
out of sample to a counterfactual in which abortion remained
illegal and the number of illegal abortions performed remained
steady at the 1960s level, we estimate that (with average national
effective abortion rates in 1997 for all three crimes ranging from
between 142 and 252) crime was almost 15–25 percent lower in
1997 than it would have been absent legalized abortion.
These estimates suggest that legalized abortion is a primary
explanation for the large drops in murder, property crime, and
violent crime that our nation has experienced over the last de-
cade. Indeed, legalized abortion may account for as much as
one-half of the overall crime reduction. Assuming that this claim
is correct, existing estimates of the costs of crime (e.g., Miller,
Cohen, and Rossman [1993] suggest that the social bene t to
reduced crime as a result of abortion may be on the order of $30
billion dollars annually. Increased imprisonment between 1991
36. Roughly 75 percent of never-married women who unintentionally become
pregnant will opt for abortion. Overall, almost exactly half of all unintended
pregnancies—whether mistimed or unwanted—will be terminated by abortion
[Institute of Medicine 1995, pp. 41–47].
414
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
and 1997 (the prison population rose about 50 percent over this
period) lowered crime 10 percent based on an elasticity of 2 .20.
Thus, together abortion and prison growth explain much, if not
all, of the decrease in crime.
37
Roughly half of the crimes committed in the United States
are done by individuals born prior to the legalization of abortion.
As these older cohorts age out of criminality and are replaced by
younger offenders born after abortion became legal, we would
predict that crime rates will continue to fall. When a steady state
is reached roughly twenty years from now, the impact of abortion
will be roughly twice as great as the impact felt so far. Our results
suggest that all else equal, legalized abortion will account for
persistent declines of 1 percent a year in crime over the next two
decades. To the extent that the Hyde Amendment effectively
restricted access to abortion, however, this prediction might be
overly optimistic.
While falling crime rates are no doubt a positive develop-
ment, our drawing a link between falling crime and legalized
abortion should not be misinterpreted as either an endorsement
of abortion or a call for intervention by the state in the fertility
decisions of women. Furthermore, equivalent reductions in crime
could in principle be obtained through alternatives for abortion,
such as more effective birth control, or providing better environ-
ments for those children at greatest risk for future crime.
D
ATA
A
PPENDIX
Crime and Police
All crime and police data used in the analysis are from
Federal Bureau of Investigation Crime in the United States [an-
nual], except the victimization data in Figure II, which are sum-
marized annually in Bureau of Justice Statistics Sourcebook of
Criminal Justice Statistics [annual].
Abortion
All abortion data are from Bureau of the Census United
States Statistical Abstract [annual]. The primary source for the
37. This is not to say that other factors did not also contribute to the decline
in crime. To the extent that there were other forces pushing crime higher, such as
crack, then the set of factors leading to reduced crime will explain more than 100
percent of the observed decrease in crime.
415
LEGALIZED ABORTION AND CRIME
abortion data is an annual survey conducted by the Alan Gutt-
macher Institute.
Prisoners
Data on number of prisoners are from Correctional Popula-
tions in the United States, published annually by the Bureau of
Justice Statistics.
Population by Age
These data are from Estimates for the United States, Regions,
Divisions, and States by 5 Year Age Groups and Sex: Annual Time
Series Estimates, U. S. Census Bureau [annual].
Poverty
Persons Below Poverty Level, by State, taken from Bureau of
the Census United States Statistical Abstract [annual].
Unemployment
Figures used represent the percent unemployed among civil-
ian noninstitutional population sixteen years and older, with
total unemployment estimates based on the Current Population
Survey, taken from Bureau of the Census, United States Statis-
tical Abstract [annual].
Fertility
The number of live births per 1000 population, taken from
Bureau of the Census, United States Statistical Abstract
[annual].
Income
Per capita state personal income, converted to 1997 dollars
using the Consumer Price Index, from Bureau of the Census,
United States Statistical Abstract [annual].
AFDC Generosity
Public Assistance Payments to Families with Dependent
Children, from Bureau of the Census, United States Statistical
Abstract [annual]. The data reported in the Statistical Abstract
are the average monthly payment per family receiving aid. That
number is multiplied by twelve to obtain a yearly average, and
then converted into 1997 dollars using the Consumer Price Index.
416
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
Nondiscretionary Concealed Handgun Law
Indicates the year in which the state enacted a law requiring
local law enforcement authorities to grant concealed weapons
permits to anyone meeting certain preestablished criteria. Data
come from Lott and Mustard [1997].
Beer Consumption
Consumption of Malt Beverages from the Beer Institute’s
Brewer’s Almanac [1995, 1998]. In gallons consumed per capita.
Cross-State Migration
The corrections for cross-state migration are based on a com-
parison of the state of birth and current state of residence of
fteen year-olds in the 1990 Census Public Use Microdata 5
percent sample.
Foreign-Born Population
Prior to 1994, the decennial census was the only source of
data on the number of foreign-born individuals living in the
United States. Data from the three Census years and 1997 were
used to interpolate intervening years. All data are from Bureau of
the Census United States Statistical Abstract [annual].
S
TANFORD
L
AW
S
CHOOL
U
NIVERSITY OF
C
HICAGO AND
A
MERICAN
B
AR
F
OUNDATION
R
EFERENCES
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Journal of Health and Social Be-
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Journal of Health Economics, XV (1996), 513–553.
417
LEGALIZED ABORTION AND CRIME
Blumstein, Alfred, Jacqueline Cohen, Jeffrey Roth, and Christy Visher, eds.,
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Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, LXXXVIII
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