Economic stress may trigger high crime rate

Robberies on the increase
Crime is characterized by common triple challenges of unemployment, poverty and inequality.
JOSEF SHEEHAMA
Windhoek recorded nearly 360 cases of robberies in 49 days between 27 June 2022 and 14 August 2022, according to City of Windhoek (CoW).

We need to understand that tough economic time’s drives more people to commit crime. Namibia is seriously facing high crime due to bad economy. It is important to note that bad economic times result in more domestic violence and greater consumption of mind-altering substances such as drugs and alcohol, leading to more violence in general and in return more crime. All these crimes are characterized by common triple challenges of unemployment, poverty and inequality. It is the young people who are presently disadvantaged, commit these crimes, and who are not in education, employment or training. And they all live in neighbourhoods characterized by poverty. Because of this structural displacement, desperation, dehumanization and hopelessness, last options are to disengage and employ survival strategies of crime to keep up and provide for themselves and their families. This situation needs to be addressed through public policy to revisit the distortions which emerged during the apartheid era that are contributing to the high unemployment rate in the modern Namibian labour market.

Unemployment and crime are always thought to work hand in hand, with an increase in one leading to a rise in the other, and vice versa. There will always be crime. That much is clear. What our goal must be as a society is to eliminate crime that is due to the stresses of poverty. Through reforms, treatment, and a removal of the stress that comes with living in poverty, it is clear that a lower crime rate will be the result. When there are zero opportunities, an individual will make their own opportunities and that will usually be through crime. It will be through violent crime if necessary. We may never completely eliminate poverty within our lifetime, but we can set the stage for people to find a different way than in previous generations. Through education, treatment, and consistency, people will be given more opportunities. That will help them be able to get that job they need to provide themselves with legitimate resources. If not, then our future might just be a world where people feel like they need to steal in order to survive.

Furthermore

Furthermore, it is important to understand that, when citizens are freed from the worries of earning a livelihood to sustain their lives, they divert their attention to more useful things. They focus on education, improvise healthcare, develop technologies that make life easy and much more. Poor economic condition is the root cause of so many problems that exist in a society. Therefore, increased crime rate has adverse effects on sustainable economic growth in Namibia by driving away both foreign and domestic investors, low investment eventually increases unemployment and poverty.

Poverty causes hunger and forces people to engage in acts of stealing or robbery to acquire what they need as they lack legitimate means to attain them. Young people especially in the inner city are more likely to get involved in drug dealing and gangs as they feel there is no other way out of their impoverished state. Income inequality makes it difficult for the poor to survive and on a wider scale it lowers the economic growth of Namibia. When income inequalities are high, crime is equally high as it is a major determinant of crime. When the poor feel inferior to the rich it causes serious social tensions to increase hence decreasing the opportunity cost of crime. Consequently, as the income distribution gets more unequal, the gap between the benefits and costs of crime widens and thus the incentive for crime becomes higher. The greater the inequality is, the greater the inducement for low status individuals to commit crime. The motivation to commit crime is not solely drawn from the expected economic benefits, but from social disgruntlement and dissatisfaction.

Education

Moreover, Namibia faces great challenges with high rate of unemployment and underemployment. Unemployment creates an environment where parents cannot send their children to go school. Uneducated children are illiterate and when people are unemployed, they tend to be more hostile, angry and jealous this creates social dismantling and crime. Namibia can reduce crime if the leaders are relevant to the people. Leaders cannot attract masses of voters but after voting nothing is improving. There are reasons why people voted you to help them with bread and butter. A large chunk of population lives below poverty line. They live in miserable conditions. Lack of proper food, clothing and shelter, poor sanitation, unsafe and sometimes dirty drinking water are just some of their many problems. Poverty itself gives rise to various other social problems. It deprives children of poor people to access education and healthcare.

To that end, there is positive association of depriving economic conditions with crimes in Namibia. The bad economy is very important determinant of crimes. The increase in inflation, interest rate, unemployment and income inequality also the main determinants of crimes.

Therefore, in order to reduce the crime rate, it is important that economic growth has to be favourable for poor class of the society. It should follow a path that directs resources to those sectors where majority of the poor exist like agriculture sector and the areas where they live.

The policy makers should make some planning to improve the economy and should provide more chance of employment and more capacity to absorb the rapid urbanization. After getting good education people don’t have suitable job. The other important point is that government should create job opportunities in rural areas as well. Moreover, the policy makers should try to keep inflation within acceptable limits so that the real income of consumers does not lose its purchasing power.

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Namibian Sun 2024-11-23

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