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Journal Article

Citation

Coronado R, Saucedo E. Empir. Econ. 2019; 57(2): 653-681.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00181-018-1458-z

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This paper examines the effects of drug-related crimes on employment in Mexico at the state level during the period 2005-2014.

RESULTS indicate that such crimes have a negative impact on employment. We are able to decompose employment into low-skilled and high-skilled employment, and results are heterogeneous among both types of employment.

RESULTS indicate that a 10% increase in drug-related crimes reduces total employment up to 0.9%. Additionally, our empirical findings indicate that high-skilled employment is more sensitive to an increase in drug-related violence than low-skilled employment. Low-skilled employment decreases up to 0.3%, while skilled employment declines up to 1.5% when drug-related violence increases by 10%. It is also found that skilled employment responds at an increasing rate when drug violence skyrockets. We also find that a rise in drug-related crimes increases wages as a mechanism to retain jobs in violent places.


Language: en

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