Laffer's Day in Court: The Revenue Effects of Criminal Justice Fees and Fines
    Working Paper 31806
  
        
    DOI 10.3386/w31806
  
        
    Issue Date 
  
          Many jurisdictions levy sizable fines and fees (legal financial obligations, or LFOs) on criminal defendants. Proponents argue LFOs are a “tax on crime” that funds courts and provides deterrence; opponents argue they do neither. We examine the fiscal implications of lowering LFOs. Incentives to default generate a “Laffer” curve with revenue eventually decreasing in LFOs. Using detailed administrative data, however, we find few defendants demonstrably on the right-hand side of the curve. Those who are tend to be poor, Black, and charged with felonies. As a result, decreasing LFOs for the average defendant would come at substantial cost to governments.
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      Copy CitationSamuel Norris and Evan K. Rose, "Laffer's Day in Court: The Revenue Effects of Criminal Justice Fees and Fines," NBER Working Paper 31806 (2023), https://doi.org/10.3386/w31806.