|
Issue 3, May/June 2003
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Falling Crime and Rising Border Enforcement: Is There a Connection?
The U.S.–Mexico border has typically
been regarded by outside observers as crime ridden. From
familiar scenes in cowboy movies where the bad guys make
a run for the border to more contemporary images of the border
as a staging area for illegal immigrants and drug smugglers,
the Southwest border is often characterized as lawless and
out of control.
Falling Crime
These stereotypes may be based on what has been true in the
past, but they have not kept up well with recent developments.
Official crime statistics show a dramatic drop in border
crime rates in the 1990s. While the border crime rate was
30 percent higher than the national crime rate in 1990, the
difference was only 12 percent in 2000. The bulk of the improvement
came in property-related crimes (such as auto theft, larceny
and burglary), which dropped 40 percent between 1990 and
2000. Violent crimes (including assault, robbery, rape and
homicide), while representing only 12 percent of total crime,
also dropped sharply, falling 29 percent over the decade.
Improvements in the crime rate during the 1990s were not
restricted to the Southwest border (Chart 1). National crime
rates declined right along with border rates. This phenomenon
has received much attention among researchers trying to understand
the reasons underlying these changes. The consensus attributes
the downward trend to several factors at the national level:
the end of the crack epidemic, a growing prison population,
changing demographics and rapid economic growth. Higher imprisonment
rates and demographic change reduced the size of the population
most at risk for committing crime. Tougher laws kept more
criminals in jail for longer sentences, while demographic
change resulted in fewer people in the highest risk group
(males ages 14–24).

These factors, especially the pace of economic growth,
have likely had a substantial impact on the border as
well. Most
border areas grew quickly in the 1990s. Job creation outpaced
population growth in many border cities, and most areas
experienced large drops in the unemployment rate. Research
has shown
that when faced with more labor market opportunities, individuals
are less likely to resort to crime.
Rising Border Enforcement
Another factor—one unique to the border region—has
also played a role in lowering crime rates. In the 1990s,
the U.S.–Mexico border experienced a resurgence in
illegal immigration and, as a result, an unprecedented buildup
of border enforcement. While some might expect illegal immigration
to be correlated with higher crime rates, mostly indirectly
through the role of smugglers, border enforcement should
be working in the opposite direction. In this case the end
result, falling aggregate crime rates, suggests that border
enforcement and the other factors discussed above won out.
Border enforcement along the U.S.–Mexico border consists
predominantly of the Border Patrol. Over 9,000 Border Patrol
agents currently man the border with Mexico. At the same
time, enforcement has increasingly come to rely on technological
advances and other hardware in locating and apprehending
undocumented immigrants. Today’s Border Patrol uses
everything from remote video surveillance, motion detectors,
mobile infrared nightscopes and helicopters to old-fashioned
barriers such as walls, floodlights and road checkpoints.
Although the Border Patrol does not typically apprehend criminals
who commit nonimmigration offenses, like the ones we are
considering here, the Border Patrol’s visibility and
the omnipresent monitoring devices and checkpoints throughout
the border region deter all forms of crime.
This point is best illustrated by looking at the impact on
crime of two major border enforcement offensives in the early
to mid-1990s: Operation Hold the-Line in El Paso in 1993
and Operation Gatekeeper in San Diego in 1994. As Chart 2
shows, in the year following the introduction of Hold-the-Line
in El Paso, property crime rates fell 17.6 percent (the national
rate declined only 1 percent). In the year after Gatekeeper
was introduced, property crime rates in San Diego fell 16
percent (the national rate declined only 2.3 percent).

Given this preliminary evidence
of a possible causal relationship between enforcement and
crime, we tested
this in an econometric
model where we controlled for economic conditions, the
volume of immigration and other variables. We found
that a 10 percent
increase in monthly linewatch hours (equivalent to adding
about 515 full-time agents) leads to a 0.3 percent fall
in the monthly property crime rate (equivalent to about
862
fewer property crimes per year).
Redistributing Crime
Despite this good news about border crime rates and the role
of the Border Patrol, a set of second-order effects deserves
attention. The overall border crime rate has fallen substantially
from its 1990 peak, but the bulk of the improvement has been
concentrated, not surprisingly, in the communities targeted
for early border enforcement initiatives, namely San Diego
and El Paso. Most border counties, albeit much smaller than
San Diego and El Paso, did not experience declines as steep
as the national drop and thus have become relatively more
crime ridden in 2000 compared with the nation.
The lesson in this analysis is that until border enforcement
initiatives impact the entire Southwest border, crackdowns
in one area may result in fewer crimes in that vicinity but
also in a redistribution of crimes to other areas. For example,
in the years that Hold-the-Line and Gatekeeper were introduced,
the neighboring counties of Hudspeth, Texas, and Imperial,
Calif., both experienced relatively large increases in their
crime rates. These second-order effects have already been
apparent in the changing geographic pattern of illegal immigration.
The traditional migrant gateways of Tijuana–San Diego
and Juárez–El Paso have been replaced by migrant
flows through smaller, less patrolled towns in Arizona and
South Texas.
Getting tough on the border has had positive spillovers on
border crime rates. The border has realized marked declines
in the incidence of crime. However, the crime that is occurring
has become more equally distributed across border counties.
Less populated counties are contending with a greater share
of border crimes, a development that likely stems in part
from the launching of the border offensives Gatekeeper and
Hold-the-Line. This may not be a significant problem as long
as crime rates continue to fall, but that trend may already
have been reversed. Since mid-1999, the downward trend in
border crime has flattened considerably.
— Pia M. Orrenius and Roberto Coronado
| About the Authors
Orrenius is a senior economist
in the Research Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas. Coronado is an economic analyst
in the Research Department of the Bank’s
El Paso Branch.
About Southwest
Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited and
a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
P.O. Box 655906, Dallas, TX 75265-5906, or by
telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
|
|