Working Paper

School Indiscipline and Crime

Tony Beatton, Michael P. Kidd, Matteo Sandi
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9526

This paper studies the impact of compulsory schooling on in-school violence using individual-level administrative data matching education and criminal records from Queensland. Exploiting a dropout age reform in 2006, it defines a series of regression-discontinuity specifications. While police records show that property and drug offences decrease, education records indicate that in-school violence increases. Effects concentrate among students with prior criminal records and their classmates, with greater exposure to in-school violence leading to increased criminality at older ages. Dropout age reforms may alter the school environment and prior studies that fail to consider in-school behaviour may over-estimate their short-run crime-reducing impact.

CESifo Category
Labour Markets
Economics of Education
Keywords: youth crime, minimum dropout age, school attendance
JEL Classification: I200, K420