Using a laboratory experiment we explore competing claims on the welfare effects of civil forfeiture. Experiment participants are tasked with making trade-offs in allocating resources “to fight crime” with and without the ability to seize and forfeit assets. It is an open question whether the societal impact of reducing crime is greater in a world with or without civil forfeiture. Proponents of civil forfeiture argue that the ill-gotten gains of criminals can be used by law enforcement to further fight crime. Opponents claim that the confiscation of assets by law enforcement distorts the prioritization of cases by focusing attention, not on cases with the largest societal impact, but on those with the highest valued assets that can be seized. We find that the public is better off in a world without civil forfeiture.
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13 September 2017
Research Article|
September 13 2017
The Welfare Effects of Civil Forfeiture Available to Purchase
Bart J. Wilson
Bart J. Wilson
Smith Institute for Political Economy and Philosophy & Economic Science Institute,
Chapman University
, USA
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We thank the editor and two reviewers for suggestions that have improved the paper. We also thank Megan Luetje for recruiting our experiment participants and Jeffrey Kirchner for his professional software programming. Finally, we gratefully acknowledge research support from the Institute for Justice. This paper reflects the opinions of the authors and does not necessarily reflect the position of Buchalter, Chapman University, or the Institute for Justice.
Online ISSN: 2326-6201
Print ISSN: 2326-6198
© 2017 M. Preciado and B. J. Wilson
2017
M. Preciado and B. J. Wilson
Licensed re-use rights only
Review of Behavioral Economics (2017) 4 (2): 153–179.
Citation
Preciado M, Wilson BJ (2017), "The Welfare Effects of Civil Forfeiture". Review of Behavioral Economics, Vol. 4 No. 2 pp. 153–179, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/105.00000063
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