Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Study: 1 in 6 Young Americans Have Stolen Something in the Past Year

"Geoffrey Fain Williams, an economist at Transylvania University, used data on self-reported thefts from Ohio State University’s National Longitudinal Study of Youth, which followed more than 8,000 people who were 12 to 16 years old when the survey launched in 1996. In the 15 years that followed, participants were asked about a variety of topics, including stealing. The subjects were regularly asked whether they had stolen something in the past year and if so, how much it was worth."
Williams found that theft is relatively common, with about 16% of the participants reporting having stolen something in the past year. One in 5 men have swiped something; 1 in 10 women report doing the same. But people generally only steal for a short period of time, with less than 5% continuing to steal for more than a year.
“For the majority of offenders, property crime may simply be an exploratory phase,” Williams wrote. Once offenders entered their late teen years, their interest in continuing to steal dropped off dramatically, with most thieves under the age of 24, the study found. One reason the young thieves may have lost interest is that they mostly stole objects of little value, only netting about $37.50 per theft. And the thieves generally didn’t need the money; most of the thieves were well off, and being poor didn’t drive the study participants to steal more.
One potential issue with the study is that stealing was self-reported, so actual numbers could be higher.
Is tax cheating worst, better or about the same?

3 comments:

bagoh20 said...

"One potential issue with the study is that stealing was self-reported, so actual numbers could be higher."

Ya think? What's the percentage of people with a mind to steal would also be extremely honest at the same time.

Methadras said...

I don't cheat on my taxes. I just find ways to tell the government to go fuck itself and not give them anything more as legally and humanly possible.

bagoh20 said...

I pay more than I have too, because I'm too lazy to claim every little expense or charitable donation, and I want some cushion if I ever get audited. If I do, I expect them to owe me money after we're done.

I want to audit the IRS expenditures, and get penalties and interest on every mistake they made deducted from employee pensions.