Working Paper

State or Private Security Supply? An Analysis from the Institutional Economics Perspective

Wolfgang Bretschneider, Andreas Freytag, Johannes P. Rieckmann, Tim H. Stuchtey
CESifo, Munich, 2022

CESifo Working Paper No. 9849

The issue of internal security has become increasingly complex over the past decades. As there is an increasing overlap between private and public provision of security, the question of how to allocate responsibility for security between the public sphere (state) and the private sphere has become important. The literature suggests that this question cannot be answered based on a simple private vs. public binarity. Concepts that can provide both clarity and sufficient complexity are much needed. This article offers an institutional economics concept based on the difference between provision and production, and discusses selection criteria for public vs. private provision, and production of protection services at three different stages: punishment as deterrence; patrol services; and self-defence. What stands out is that a unique characteristic of the economic good ‘protection service’ is of particular relevance for the level of provision as well as of production: the potential repressivity.

CESifo Category
Public Choice
Keywords: protection, privatisation of security, homeland security, civil security, economics of security, public good, publicly provided good, security industry
JEL Classification: H410, H420, K420, L330, L510