Discussion paper

DP20288 Revisiting the Lasting Impacts of Incarceration

Using newly-linked administrative and commercial data from Virginia spanning 25 years, we study the consequences of incarceration. While previous research has examined labor market outcomes and recidivism, we focus on two of the primary channels through which low-income households build wealth: asset ownership (homes and cars) and human capital formation. To identify causal effects, we use a matched difference-in-differences design. In line with much of the literature on the impact of incarceration in the U.S., we find no evidence of scarring effects on labor market outcomes or changes in recidivism beyond the incapacitation period. However, we find that incarceration leads to a persistent reduction in asset accumulation: seven years after sentencing, homeownership has declined by 1.1 percentage points (12.1%) and car ownership by 2.7 percentage points (18.1%). Incarceration also lowers human capital formation, reducing college enrollment by 1.4 percentage points (15.1%).

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Citation

Humphries, J, C Macaire, A Ouss, M Stevenson and W Van Dijk (2025), ‘DP20288 Revisiting the Lasting Impacts of Incarceration‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 20288. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp20288