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Journal Article

Citation

McDougal TL, Shirk DA, Muggah R, Patterson JH. J. Econ. Geogr. 2015; 15(2): 297-327.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/jeg/lbu021

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The volume of firearms sold in USA and trafficked across the US-Mexico border is notoriously difficult to estimate. We consider a unique approach using GIS-generated county-level panel data (1993-1999 and 2010-2012) of Federal Firearms Licenses to sell small arms (FFLs) to estimate the realized demand for firearms based on the distance by road from the nearest point on the US-Mexico border. We use a time-series negative binomial model paired with a post-estimation population attributable fraction (PAF) estimator. We do so to control determinants of domestic demand. We are able to estimate a total demand for trafficking, both in terms of firearms and dollar sales for the firearms industry. We find that nearly 2.2% (between 0.9% and 3.7%) of US domestic arms sales are attributable to the US-Mexico traffic in the period 2010-2012, representing 212,887 firearms (between 89,816 and 359,205) purchased annually to be trafficked.


Language: en

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