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040 _aES-MaBCA
_cES-MaBCA
100 _914136
_ade Hoyos, Rafael
100 _914137
_aGutiérrez Fierros, Carlos
100 _914138
_aVargas M., J. Vicente
245 _aIdle Youth in Mexico
_h[Recurso electrónico] PDF
_b: Trapped between the War on Drugs and Economic Crisis
260 _cFebruary 2016
_bWorld Bank, Washington, DC
300 _aRecurso online, 34 p.
_g860 KB
490 _aPolicy Research Working Paper
_v7558
520 _aThe present study combines data from Mexico’s employment surveys (Encuesta Nacional de Empleo and Encuesta Nacional de Ocupación y Empleo) with the country’s official statistics on murder rates to create a state-level panel data set covering the period 1995 to 2013. Including most of the common controls identified by the literature, the results show that the rate of male youth ages 19 to 24 not studying and out of work (the so-called ninis), is not correlated with homicide rates during the period 1995 to 2006. However, there is evidence that a positive correlation between male ninis and murder rates arises between 2007 and 2013, a period during which murder rates in Mexico increased threefold. The association between ninis and homicide rates is stronger in states located along the border with the United States, a region particularly affected by organized crime and the international financial crisis of 2008–09.
650 0 _91178
_aInvestigación
_y1993-2013
650 0 _93682
_aCrisis económicas
650 0 _91165
_aParo
650 0 _91225
_aDelincuencia
650 0 _91961
_aDrogas
651 0 _91077
_aMéxico
856 4 _uhttps://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/23885/Idle0youth0in000and0economic0crisis.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
_qPDF
942 _2udc
_cBK
999 _c18051
_d18054