RT Article T1 More Canadian Police Means Less Crime JF Canadian journal of criminology and criminal justice VO 61 IS 4 SP 69 OP 100 A1 Demers, Simon LA English YR 2019 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1688810196 AB New empirical insights into Canadian policing are derived from publicly available panel data collected by Statistics Canada between 1998 and 2017 across almost 700 Canadian municipal police jurisdictions. Canadian police jurisdictions that hire more officers tend to experience less crime overall, including less property crime specifically. Each additional Canadian police officer correlates with slightly fewer homicides and 13.3 fewer reported property crimes on average, including 2.9 fewer burglaries and 3.7 fewer stolen vehicles annually. The results cannot be explained away by time-invariant jurisdiction-specific factors, population growth, or other time trends common to all jurisdictions. In elasticity terms, a 1% increase in Canadian police staffing is associated empirically with reductions of 0.93% in homicides, 0.44% in property crimes, 0.63% in burglaries, and 1.37% in vehicle thefts. Purely in terms of crime reduction and reduced victimization across these crime types, it is estimated that the typical Canadian police officer has the potential to generate a marginal benefit to society worth more than $114,000 annually. Taking into account unreported property crime would increase the marginal benefit to society up to $198,000. This new evidence confirms that public investments into local policing can contribute to the reduction of crime and can yield social benefits that exceed their costs. K1 Burglary K1 Crime K1 CRIME victims K1 Offenses against property K1 Police K1 Public investments K1 Statistics Canada K1 Economics of policing K1 Police Performance K1 Police staffing K1 Police strength K1 Police workforce DO 10.3138/cjccj.2018-0049