Working Papers

Do Refugees Cause Crime?

No.

1470

Publisher

ERF

Date

April, 2021

Topic

K4. Legal Procedure, the Legal System, and Illegal Behavior

J6. Mobility, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Immigrant Workers

F2. International Factor Movements and International Business

The impact of immigration on crime continues to stir heated debates in public policy circles around the world whilst surveys indicate that host societies favor mitigating measures because they are concerned of what they perceive as an impingement on their security with each new wave of migration inflow. Whether there is any truth to such perceptions, however, remains a mystery for the case of developing countries since causal evidence is extremely limited. That those countries host the overwhelming majority of the global refugee population makes it paramount for researchers to supply the missing scientific link. Propelled by the magnitude of this need, this paper analyzes the impact of refugees on crime rates using the case of Turkey that hosts the world’s largest refugee population within any national borders. In doing so, it uses instrumental variables, Difference-in-Differences (DiD) and Staggered DiD methods to explain if the war-fleeing Syrian refugees pushed Turkey’s crime rates higher both in the short and the long-run. Controlling for various time-varying characteristics of provinces and presenting a battery of robustness checks against various identification threats, its findings show either null or negative effects of refugees on the incidence of criminal activity in the country.
Do Refugees Cause Crime?

Research Associates

Aysegul Kayaoglu

Associate Professor of Economics, Department of Economics,...