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Journal Article

Citation

Cohen MA. J. Quant. Criminol. 1998; 14(1): 5-33.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Programs targeted at high-risk youth are designed to prevent high-school dropout, crime, drug abuse, and other forms of delinquency. Even if shown to be successful in reducing one or more social ill, a key policy question is whether the cost to society from that intervention program exceeds its benefits. Although the costs of intervention programs are often available, the benefits are more illusive. This paper provides estimates of the potential benefits from "saving" a high-risk youth, by estimating the lifetime costs associated with the typical career criminal, drug abuser, and high-school dropout. In the absence of controlled experimental data on the number of career criminals averted, one can ask the reverse questionóHow many career criminals must be prevented before the program "pays for itself?" Based on a 2% discount rate, the typical career criminal causes $1.3ñ$1.5 million in external costs; a heavy drug user, $370,000 to $970,000; and a high-school dropout, $243,000 to $388,000. Eliminating duplication between crimes committed by individuals who are both heavy drug users and career criminals results in an overall estimate of the "monetary value of saving a high-risk youth" of $1.7 to $2.3 million. (Abstract Adapted from Source: Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 1998. Copyright © 1998 by Springer)

At Risk Juvenile
At Risk Youth
Cost Analysis
Financial Factors
Juvenile Crime
Juvenile Delinquency
Juvenile Dropout
Juvenile Substance Use
Substance Use Prevention
Drug Use Prevention
Delinquency Prevention
Crime Prevention
School Dropout Prevention
Prevention Program
05-05

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