An investigation on the natural rate of crime rates with Fourier panel unit root test in selected emerging economies
Abstract
Purpose – The specific objective of the study is to investigate the presence of natural rate of crime rates in
selected emerging economies by using panel unit roots. The majority of the literature examines the issue
using conventional unit root tests in a country-specific context. Meanwhile, there is no panel unit root
investigation has been undertaken considering both cross-sectional dependence (CD) and structural
changes.
Design/methodology/approach – As a result, this study is to fill the aforementioned gap and validate the
natural rate of crime rates for 10 countries by using a Fourier panel unit root test. The advantage of the test is
that structural shifts are modelled as gradual or smooth changes with a Fourier approximation, and it also
accounts cross-sectional dependency. Thus, the Fourier panel unit root test may have better performance in
capturing potential changes in the nature of data.
Findings – The result of the conventional unit roots test shows evidence of the hysteresis effect in crime, as it
stands does not adequately account for smooth transitions or breaks. On contrary, the Fourier panel unit root
test confirms the natural rate hypothesis in crime rates. The present results highlight the detrimental effects of
crime cannot be abated by short-run deterrence policies.
Originality/value – Contrary to previous studies, the theoretical implications of the study imply that the
empirical models consider the dynamic nature of crime rates should account for natural rate properties instead
of the hysteresis assumption.
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