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The high price of incarceration in America

Jazzy

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While the old saying notes that crime doesn't pay, that doesn't hold true for America's system of incarceration, which has seen spending more than triple since 1980.

That means each U.S. resident is paying about $260 per year on corrections, up from $77 per person in 1980, thanks to the country's annual $80 billion price tag for incarceration, according to a new report from The Hamilton Project, which is part of Washington, D.C., think tank The Brookings Institution.

The surge in spending poses a number of questions about the country's system of incarceration, especially given that the overall rate for violent and property crimes has actually declined 45 percent during the past two decades.

So, if fewer crimes are being committed, why are we spending more on prisons? Federal and state policies -- such as mandatory sentencing and repeat-offender laws -- have actually led to an explosion in the country's incarceration rate, which is driving up spending.

"For every prisoner there are costs and benefits to incarceration," said Ben Harris, a co-author of "Ten Economic Facts about Crime and Incarceration in the United States." "For someone who has committed a violent offense, we as a society can agree it's worth putting this person in prison."

But when it comes to "putting a person in prison to reduce the chance they will commit a low-level crime, such as dealing a small amount of drugs, the benefits aren't as obvious," Harris said.

Changes in how America deals with low-level crimes such as drug offenses mean the country now has an incarceration rate of 710 inmates per 100,000 residents, compared with the typical rate of 115 among nations in the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development.

At the same time, the massive costs mean less money is available for education or methods to reduce crime, such as adding more police to a community, he added. The social costs also are significant, given that many of those placed behind bars are young men 15 to 30 years old, who lose out on labor skills and see their "opportunities start plummeting," Harris said.

Source

Any thoughts on how the massive costs can be reduced?
 
Have Mr. Obama tell the bad guys to stop committing crimes.

Yeah, that ought to do it.


At least 3, including 76-year-old woman, hurt in city shootings
May 07, 2014

At least three people, including a 76-year-old woman, have been wounded in shootings this afternoon and evening in Chicago.

In the most recent attack, the woman was shot as she stopped for a stop sign near 40th Street and Campbell Avenue sometime before 7 p.m. After the shooting, she drove to Garfield Boulevard and Western Avenue before calling 911, authorities said.
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2014-05-07/news/chi-chicago-shootings-3-shot-including-76yearold-woman-20140507_1_city-shootings-76-year-old-woman-graze-wound
 
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