Discussion paper

DP15214 The Health Effects of Prison

This paper studies the effect on mortality of two Swedish early release reforms in 1993 and 1999 that held prison sentences constant but increased the share of time inmates were required to serve from one-half to two-thirds. Contrary to previous correlational evidence, we find that reform exposure, and the corresponding increase in time served, did not harm post-release prisoner health. Rather, the overall risk of death decreases, with especially large and significant effects for those who are positively selected in terms of their criminal careers and connection to society. We also find (i) significant and persistent reductions in the chance of suicide, (ii) short-term reductions in violent death, and (iii) long-term improvement in general health (circulatory death). These cause-specific effects are driven by particular at-risk populations – individuals with pre-incarceration mental health problems, violent offenders, and older offenders, respectively. We argue that these findings are primarily driven by a direct in-prison health treatment and services mechanism: we demonstrate that health care utilization and program participation increases with time served. We also find that reform exposure decreases recidivism and has some very short-term beneficial labor market effects. Our main findings, however, do not appear to be driven by these life-style changes.

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Citation

Hjalmarsson, R and M Lindquist (2020), ‘DP15214 The Health Effects of Prison‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 15214. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp15214