Study finds house crime doesn't pay

Criminals are on the lookout for different loot since globalisation brought prices of some household goods down, new research…

Criminals are on the lookout for different loot since globalisation brought prices of some household goods down, new research revealed today.

Criminals are moving from traditional household burglaries to personal muggings to keep up with the times, experts at the University of Leicester found.

James Treadwell, criminology lecturer at the university, said globalisation - especially cheaper electronic goods from China and the Far East - was forcing thieves to rethink their targets.

Mr Treadwell said: “The last decade has been a remarkable one where crime is concerned, with massive changes and shifts.

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“If we look back to the 1980s and 1990s, the type of staple crimes would be, for example, very often burglary and car crime and those crimes worked because they followed a business model and it was possible to break into a house and steal a video recorder and sell that at a profit.

“Cheap labour in China has had an impact on the type of crime that’s committed in the UK and the type of goods that are stolen today. Gradually, the prices of such goods has fallen so low as to they almost have no resale value. If you can buy a DVD player for £19.99, it’s simply not worth stealing.”

Mr Treadwell is due to present his findings on changes in criminal trends at the British Society of Criminology conference at the University of Leicester in July.

“While we might have seen a decline in some types of crime, we have seen a rise in other forms of criminal activity, particularly young people who seem to be mugging one another,” he added.

“While DVD players for example, got cheaper, certain consumer items became smaller and were very, very expensive and sought after and so the latest mobile phone, or the latest iPod, which people carry about them, have become targets for robbers.

“It is these expensive, personal items, which are the most attractive to thieves today as they still retain value and can therefore be sold on, igniting a career change for criminals from the more traditional household burglaries to personal muggings.”

According to the university, the British Crime Survey (BCS) for 2008/09 estimated there were 1.28 million domestic burglaries in England and Wales in 1999, almost one in 10 of the crimes recorded by the survey.

By 2008/09 that number had fallen and there were some 744,000 burglaries. The survey also found burglary dropped 58 per cent between 1995 and 2008/09.

PA