Do Remote Workers Deter Neighborhood Crime? Evidence from the Rise of Working from Home

60 Pages Posted: 7 Aug 2023 Last revised: 14 Nov 2023

See all articles by Jesse Matheson

Jesse Matheson

University of Sheffield

Brendon McConnell

City, University of London

James Rockey

University of Birmingham - Department of Economics

Argyris Sakalis

University of Birmingham

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: August 6, 2023

Abstract

In this paper, we provide the first evidence of the effect of the shift to remote work on crime. We examine the impact of the rise of working from home (WFH) on neighborhood-level burglary rates, exploiting geographically granular crime data and a neighborhood WFH measure. We document three key findings. First, a one standard deviation increase in neighborhood WFH (9.5pp) leads to a persistent 4% drop in burglaries. This effect is large, explaining more than half of the 30% decrease in burglaries across England and Wales since 2019. Second, this treatment effect exhibits heterogeneity according to the remote work capacity of contiguous neighborhoods. Specifically, being surrounded by relatively high WFH neighborhoods can entirely offset the crime-reducing benefit of a given neighborhood’s WFH potential. This is consistent with the predictions of a spatial search model of criminal activity that we develop in the paper. Finally, we document large welfare gains to the decrease in burglary. We estimate welfare gains using a hedonic house price model. Our most conservative estimates show the welfare gains are £24.5billion (1% of 2022 UK GDP), but the true gains are likely much higher. These estimates suggest the reduction in burglaries are among the most important consequences of the rise in WFH.

Keywords: Working From Home, Property Crime, Spatial Spillovers, Hedonic House Price Models

JEL Classification: H75, K42, R20

Suggested Citation

Matheson, Jesse and McConnell, Brendon and Rockey, James and Sakalis, Argyris, Do Remote Workers Deter Neighborhood Crime? Evidence from the Rise of Working from Home (August 6, 2023). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4532854 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4532854

Jesse Matheson

University of Sheffield ( email )

9 Mappin Street
Sheffield, S1 4DT
United Kingdom

HOME PAGE: http://sites.google.com/sheffield.ac.uk/jessematheson

Brendon McConnell (Contact Author)

City, University of London ( email )

London
United Kingdom

James Rockey

University of Birmingham - Department of Economics ( email )

University House
University of Birmingham
116 Edgbaston Park Rd, Birmingham B15 2TY
United Kingdom

Argyris Sakalis

University of Birmingham ( email )

The University of Birmingham
Birmingham, B15 2TT
United Kingdom

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