犯罪组织教育的回归:上大学对迈克尔·考利昂有帮助吗?

Nadia Campaniello, Rowena Gray, G. Mastrobuoni
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引用次数: 19

摘要

在犯罪活动中接受教育有什么回报吗?本文是第一个研究教育是否不仅对合法活动有积极影响,而且对非法活动也有积极影响的研究之一。我们以历史上历史最悠久的犯罪集团之一为例:意大利裔美国黑手党。其最成功的成员是有能力的商人,他们精心策划犯罪,这些犯罪需要在学校里学习的能力:在建立诈骗时提取最佳租金,在开展高利贷业务时权衡利益与违约风险,或者在建立毒品交易系统时组织供应链、物流和分销。我们通过将暴徒与从美国1940年人口普查中抽取的各种样本进行比较来解决这个问题,包括他们最近的(非暴徒)邻居的样本。我们记录下暴徒比他们的邻居平均少受一年教育。我们发现,暴徒的教育回报率为7.5-8.5%,仅略低于他们的邻居,比美国出生的男性或男性公民低2-5个百分点。犯罪分子回国的人数一直是意大利移民或所有原籍国移民的两倍。其中,那些被控犯有贪污和赌博等复杂罪行的人的回报率最高。我们的结论是,即使在以某种程度的复杂性为特征的非法活动中,如20世纪中期美国有组织犯罪的情况下,也存在私人教育回报。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Returns to Education in Criminal Organizations: Did Going to College Help Michael Corleone?
Is there any return to education in criminal activities? This paper is one of the first to investigate whether education has not only a positive impact on legitimate, but also on illegitimate activities. We use as a case study one of the longest running criminal corporations in history: the Italian-American mafia. Its most successful members were capable businessmen, orchestrating crimes that required abilities that might be learned at school: extracting the optimal rent when setting up a racket, weighting interests against default risk when starting a loan sharking business or organizing supply chains, logistics and distribution when setting up a drug dealing system. We address this question by comparing mobsters to a variety of samples drawn from the United States 1940 Population Census, including a sample of their closest (non-mobster) neighbors. We document that mobsters have one year less education than their neighbors on average. We find that mobsters have significant returns to education of 7.5–8.5% , which is only slightly smaller than their neighbors and 2–5 percentage points smaller than for U.S.-born men or male citizens. Mobster returns were consistently about twice as large as a sample of Italian immigrants or immigrants from all origin countries. Within that, those charged with complex crimes including embezzlement and bookmaking have the highest returns. We conclude that private returns to education exist even in the illegal activities characterized by a certain degree of complexity as in the case of organized crime in mid-twentieth century United States.
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