FACTS ABOUT THE PRISON
SYSTEM IN THE UNITED STATES
October 2007
On Thursday, October 4, Senator Jim Webb will conduct a
Joint Economic Committee hearing to explore the steep increase in the U.S.
prison population.
RATIONALE FOR HEARING
The hearing entitled ŇMass Incarceration in the United
States: At What Cost?Ó will host a number
of experts in the field to examine the reasons behind this growth in the prison
population, whether it correlates with
decreases in crime, the economic costs of maintaining the prison system, and
the long-term labor market and social costs of mass incarceration.
KEY POINTS
- The
United States has the highest reported incarceration rate in the world.
While the United States currently incarcerates 750 inmates per
100,000 persons, the world average rate is 166 per 100,000 persons. Russia, the country with the
second highest incarceration rate, imprisons 624 per 100,000 persons. Compared to its democratic,
advanced market economy counterparts, the United States has more people in
prison by several orders of magnitude. Although crime rates have decreased since 1990, the
rate of imprisonment has continued to increase.
- Growth
in the prison population is due to changing policy, not increased crime.
Many criminal justice experts have found that the increase in the
incarceration rate is the product of changes in penal policy and practice,
not changes in crime rates.
Changes in sentencing, both in terms of time served and the range
of offenses meriting incarceration, underlie the growth in the prison
population.
- Changes
in drug policy have had the single greatest impact on criminal justice
policy. The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 created mandatory
minimum sentences for possession of specific amounts of cocaine. The Act instituted a 100-to-1
differential in the treatment of powder and crack cocaine, treating possession of 5 grams of crack
cocaine the same as possession of 500 grams of powder cocaine. Crack cocaine is typically
consumed by the poor, while powder cocaine, a significantly more expensive
drug, is consumed by wealthier users. Mandatory minimum sentences for low-level crack-cocaine
users are comparable (and harsher in certain cases) to sentences for major
drug dealers.
- The
composition of prison admissions has also shifted toward less serious
offenses, characterized by parole violations and drug offenses.
In 2005, four out of five drug arrests were for possession and one
out of five were for sales.
The crime history for three-quarters of drug offenders in state
prisons involved non-violent or drug offenses.
- The
prison system has a disproportionate impact on minority communities. African
Americans, who make-up 12.4 percent of the population, represent more than
half of all prison inmates, compared to one-third twenty years ago. Although African Americans constitute
14 percent of regular drug users, they are 37 percent of those arrested
for drug offenses, and 56 percent of persons in state prisons for drug
crimes. African Americans
serve nearly as much time in federal prisons for drug offenses as whites
do for violent crimes.
- The
U.S. prison system has enormous economic costs associated with prison
construction and operation, productivity losses, and wage effects. In
2006, states spent an estimated $2 billion on prison construction, three
times the amount they were spending fifteen years earlier. The combined expenditures of local
governments, state governments, and the federal government for law
enforcement and corrections total over $200 billion annually. In addition to these costs, the
incarceration rate has significant costs associated with the productivity
of both prisoners and ex-offenders.
The economic output of prisoners is mostly lost to society while
they are imprisoned. Negative
productivity effects continue after release. This wage penalty grows with time, as previous
imprisonment can reduce the wage growth of young men by some 30 percent.
- Prisons
are housing many of the nationŐs mentally ill. Prisons are
absorbing the cost of housing the nationŐs mentally ill. The number of mentally ill in
prison is nearly five times the number in inpatient mental hospitals. Large numbers of mentally ill
inmates, as well as inmates with HIV, tuberculosis, and hepatitis also
raise serious questions regarding the costs and distribution of health
care resources.
- The
United States faces enormous problems of offender reentry and recidivism.
The number of ex-offenders reentering their communities has
increased fourfold in the past two decades. On average, however, two out of every three released
prisoners will be rearrested and one in two will return to prison within
three years of release.