The activities of criminal organizations like the Sicilian mafia are
clearly driven by economic incentives. And like any other economic
agent, they also face a variety of constraints. This suggests that
economics could be a valuable tool, both for understanding how organized
crime works and indicating how policy-makers can deter and combat its
activities.
A recent CEPR publication gives an overview of the latest
applications of economic theory to illegal markets. Its contributors
also examine legal markets where criminal organizations operate. Since
organized crime is active in so many different markets, it is difficult
to use one single approach to analysing its behaviour. The book
therefore draws on two kinds of models: one treating the criminal
organization like a firm in competition with others; the other seeing it
more like a government or powerful monopoly.
The first case is more applicable in the several illegal markets
where there are no significant barriers to entry. These include numbers,
loan-sharking, prostitution, smuggling and counterfeiting. In these
circumstances, it seems unlikely that criminal organizations can have
centralized control and operate like a government. These markets seem to
be competitive and the elements which could constitute monopolistic
rents are usually swept away by the forces of competition and by
conflicts between rival organizations.
In contrast, there are several markets where criminal organizations
tend to integrate themselves vertically so as to achieve some degree of
central coordination. These include money laundering, large scale
distribution of narcotics (especially to international markets) and the
supply of violence for extortion. Such coordination is usually sought
through the establishment of cartels mostly on a territorial basis - and
the strengthening of vertical relationships between organizations
specializing in the different inputs needed to provide illegal services
- violence, corruption, financial expertise, etc.
Thinking of organized crime in terms of centralized control has been
advocated by the Italian prosecutors in the so-called maxi-trial against
the heads of the Sicilian mafia. Their view is based on evidence of the
existence of a committee of local heads of mafia families. This
apparently acts as a centralized decision-maker for the relevant
economic activities of the families.
The advantages of centralization are said to arise from a number of
different sources: first, economies of scale in some of the basic
services needed to perform illegal activities; second, exploitation of
monopolistic prices in some markets less open to external competition;
third, internalization of negative externalities due to oversupply of
violence; fourth, avoidance of resource dissipation through competitive
lobbying and corruption; fifth, better management of a portfolio of
risky activities; and lastly, easier access to national and
international financial markets.
But other evidence suggests that there are strong forces that deter
criminal organizations from having a high degree of central
coordination. These include the fact that the risks involved in illegal
transactions decrease more than proportionally with their size . This is
because of the impossibility of making contracts binding in illegal
markets. Large accumulations are also discouraged by the fact that
property rights are not well defined, leaving property potentially
subject to seizure by the enforcement agencies.
Major participants in illegal activities face other forces that
operate against centralization. For example, the risk of detection of a
particular criminal activity grows with respect to the number of people
involved: the more members there are in the organization, the greater
the likelihood that some may cooperate with the investigative agencies.
Establishing whether the centralized government model or the
competitive firm model better describe the supply of illegal activities
is not only a theoretical problem. The government’s most appropriate
deterrence policies clearly depend on how the illegal markets are
structured in terms of barriers to entry, the number of firms active,
their coordination of pricing and marketing strategies, and their
attitude towards the use of violence.
If criminal activity is highly centralized, an increase in deterrence
against illegal transactions may increase the entry costs to that market
and therefore raise the profits for existing illegal firms. This may
happen in the case of ‘wars’ on drug-trafficking. On the other hand,
if the illegal markets are mainly competitive, lowering barriers to
entry (by legalising the process or reducing deterrence and enforcement)
may increase overall output of the commodity. This may happen when
prostitution or soft drugs are legalised or turned a blind eye.
The book suggests that the activities of organized crime are strongly
influenced by policy-makers’ decisions about how to tackle them. For
example:
- The larger the remit of markets in which transactions are treated
as illegal by the government, the greater are the incentives for
criminal organizations to compete for the establishment of local
monopolies over coercion.
- The heavier is the fiscal and regulatory pressure on legal
markets, the greater are the incentives for legal firms to shift
resources to the illegal markets or to undertake transactions that
are out of the government’s control.
- Investment in deterrence activities can have a destabilizing
effect on the local monopolies of incumbent criminal organizations,
potentially increasing their investment in violence and corruption.
These observations suggest that, in addition to the numerous standard
constraints on economic policy-making, the government must consider
those arising from the possibility of illegal markets being created.
Such constraints cannot be removed simply by larger investments in
deterrence. Indeed, quite apart from their cost and the distortions they
impose on legal transactions, the more such deterrence policies are
effective, the more they create incentives for investment in corruption
and manipulation of the deterrence agencies themselves.
The Economics of Organized Crime is edited by Gianluca
Fiorentini (University of Florence) and Sam Peltzman (University of
Chicago). Other contributors include Annelise Anderson, Stergios
Skaperdos and Constantinos Syropoulos, Michele Polo, Diego Gambetta and
Peter Reuter, Herschel I Grossman, Vito Tanzi, Frank A Cowell and James
P F Gordon, Jonathan M Karpoff and John R Lott Jr, and Marco Celentani,
Massimo Morelli and Riccardo Martina. The book is published for CEPR by
Cambridge University Press.