Chang Tom, Jacobson Mireille
USC Marshall School of Business.
The Paul Merage School of Business, UCI and NBER.
J Urban Econ. 2017 Jul;100:120-136. doi: 10.1016/j.jue.2017.04.001. Epub 2017 Apr 21.
Jurisdictions that sanction medical or, more recently, recreational marijuana use often allow retail sales at dispensaries. Dispensaries are controversial as many believe they contribute to local crime. To assess this claim, we analyze the short-term mass closing of hundreds of medical marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles. Contrary to popular wisdom, we find an immediate increase in crime around dispensaries ordered to close relative to those allowed to remain open. The increase is specific to the type of crime most plausibly deterred by bystanders, and is correlated with neighborhood walkability. We find a similar pattern of results for temporary restaurant closures due to health code violations. A likely common mechanism is that "eyes upon the street" deter some types of crime.
批准医用大麻、或者最近批准娱乐用大麻使用的司法管辖区通常允许在药房进行零售销售。药房颇具争议,因为许多人认为它们助长了当地犯罪。为了评估这一说法,我们分析了洛杉矶数百家医用大麻药房的短期大规模关闭情况。与普遍看法相反,我们发现,被勒令关闭的药房周边犯罪率相对于那些被允许继续营业的药房立即上升。这种上升特定于最有可能被旁观者阻止的犯罪类型,并且与邻里的适宜步行性相关。我们发现,因违反卫生规范而临时关闭餐厅也有类似的结果模式。一个可能的共同机制是“街头目光”能阻止某些类型的犯罪。