Books and newspapers are filled with news and debate about crime. As far as I can tell from the evidence, crime in the UK peaked in 1995, dropped sharply up to 2000 and has dropped more slowly since. There are variations for individual categories of crime, and the whole business is complicated by changes in the way recorded crimes are counted, but the overall trend is clear.
This might give pause for thought to those who give the credit to Labour’s increasingly authoritarian laws. It normally takes a year or two from a measure being introduced in Parliament to it having an effect on the streets. If government law and order policies have made the difference, we would have to conclude that John Major gets the credit: whatever his Government did in the early ’90s must have done the trick. Blair, by contrast, appears to have managed to slow the fall: any new policies introduced around 1997 and 1998 would have started making a difference around 2000, at just the time the drop in crime petered out.
As it happens, I don’t think the evidence supports the law and order policies of either party making much difference. The economic upturn of the early ’90s probably had a much bigger effect. ASBOs, CCTV, high prison populations and rafts of draconian measures brought in or accelerated over the last decade seem to have made little or no difference.
But is there a link we’re missing? Figuring out why crime falls and rises isn’t simple. After all, if it were just a reflection of the economic state of the nation, why was crime so much higher in the 1980s than the 1970s?
I’ll admit that I really don’t know, but take some consolation from the experts not knowing (or, at least, not agreeing) either.
Which brings us onto David Steel as our modern saviour, a secular deity perhaps. Did Sir David deliver us from evil more effectively than the church has ever managed?