In this paper, we develop a general equilibrium model of crime and show that
law enforcement has different roles depending on the equilibrium
characterization and the value of social norms. When an economy has a unique
stable equilibrium where a fraction of the population is productive and the
remaining predates, the government can choose an optimal law enforcement
policy to maximize a welfare function evaluated at the steady state. If such
steady state is not unique, law enforcement is still ...
In this paper, we develop a general equilibrium model of crime and show that
law enforcement has different roles depending on the equilibrium
characterization and the value of social norms. When an economy has a unique
stable equilibrium where a fraction of the population is productive and the
remaining predates, the government can choose an optimal law enforcement
policy to maximize a welfare function evaluated at the steady state. If such
steady state is not unique, law enforcement is still relevant but in a
completely different way because the steady state that prevails depends on
the initial proportions of productive and predator individuals in the economy.
The relative importance of these proportions can be changed through law
enforcement policy.
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