| The solution to Brazil's high murder rate
seemed obvious to the Brazilian government, the media, and United
Nations: Ban guns. They all went to great efforts to pass an initiative
doing just that last month, but in the end
almost two thirds of Brazil's voters rejected the proposal. It is
hard for most Americans to imagine what Brazilians are facing. For the
most recent detailed numbers,
the U.S. murder rate was 5.5 per 100,000 people in 2004.
For
Brazil it was 28.3 in 2002. That's just a little less than three times
the record U.S. murder rate at the height of prohibition in 1933.
Brazilians have a right to be skeptical that yet more gun control is
the solution. Strict licensing laws that have been in effect in Brazil
since 1940 have not solved the problem. Since 1941 it has been illegal
to bring a weapon outside one's house without authorization. Eighteen
gun-control laws and regulations were imposed during the period from
1992 to 2003. Many rules were extremely restrictive: For example, a 1997
law required anyone applying for a firearm license to have a
psychological test and knowledge of operation of firearms, and a 1999
law limited each person to two handguns. Despite new restrictions on gun
ownership being continually imposed, murder rates rose every year from
1992 to 2002, a total 41 percent increase.
Indeed, given the huge differences in murder rates between the U.S. and
Brazil, it is not too surprising that gun ownership in Brazil is just a
fraction o that in the U.S.. Almost half of American adults live in
households with guns, while just 3.5 percent of Brazilians are legally
licensed to use guns.
A gun ban might not matter if police were able to protect people, but
in poorer areas of Brazil's major cities, police response times to even
the most serious crimes are over an hour. Even in the wealthiest areas
of cities, the fastest response times are not shorter than 15 minutes.
Simply telling poor people to wait an hour for the police to show up is
not very good advice.
Everyone wants to take guns away from criminals. The problem is that the
law-abiding citizens, those who have followed the licensing and
registration rules, are disarmed, not the criminals. This leaves
potential victims more vulnerable and increases crime. As one cab driver
who voted against the ban said,
"I don't
like people walking around armed on the street. But since all the
bandits have guns, you need to have a gun at home."
Consider the case of Washington, D.C. In the five years before
Washington's ban in 1976,
the murder
rate fell from 37 to 27 per 100,000. In the five years after the ban
went into effect, the murder rate rose back up to 35. In fact, while
murder rates have fluctuated after 1976, only once have they fallen
below what they were that year. Robberies and overall violent-crime
rates followed the same trend: Robberies fell from 1,514 to 1,003 per
100,000 leasing up to 1976, and then rose by over 63 percent, up to
1,635. These drops and subsequent increases were much larger than
any changes in neighboring
Maryland
and Virginia.
For example, the District's murder rate fell 3.5 to 3 times further than
in the neighboring states and rose back 3.8 times greater.
Chicago, which has banned handguns since 1982, also saw violence rise.
Chicago's murder rate fell from 27 to 22 per 100,000 in the five years
before the law, and then rose slightly to 23. The change is even more
dramatic when compared to five neighboring Illinois counties. While
robbery data in Chicago isn't available for the years immediately after
the ban, since 1985 (the first year for which the FBI has data) robbery
rates soared.
The experience in the U.K., an island nation whose borders are much
easier to monitor, should also give gun controllers pause. The British
government banned handguns in 1997 but recently reported that gun crime
in England and Wales
nearly doubled
in the four years from 1998-99 to 2002-03.
Crime was not supposed to rise after handguns were banned.
Yet, since 1996 the
serious-violent-crime rate has soared by 69 percent; robbery is up by 45
percent, and murders up by 54 percent. Before the law, armed robberies
had fallen by 50 percent from 1993 to 1997, but as soon as handguns were
banned the robbery rate shot back up, almost to 1993 levels.
Yet, hopefully Brazilians are not the only ones who have learned these
lessons. San Francisco has an initiative on its November ballot to ban
handgun ownership, and to ban the sale of all guns within the city. It
would be a welcome sight to see both these measures struck down.
Brazilians are desperate about their crime rates, but apparently not
desperate enough to wait passively for police the next time they are
confronted by a criminal. Brazilians have experienced firsthand how the
very gun-control regulations that they already have may in fact be the
problem.
—
John R. Lott Jr., a resident scholar at the
American Enterprise Institute, is the
author of
More Guns, Less Crime and
The Bias Against Guns. Ms. Richardson is a law student at Chapman
University. |