Prison for young people costly and fails to reduce crime, says new research

March 2010

Locking up children and young people for non-violent offences is costing the taxpayer millions, while doing little to reduce the amount of crime, says a new report from leading independent think-tank nef (the new economics foundation) and supported by the Prison Reform Trust.

The report, Punishing Costs, calls into question the plans of both Labour and Conservative politicians to invest in new prisons. At a time when almost all public services are facing drastic cuts, it is more vital than ever to scrutinise spending on prisons. The report shows how the number of young people and children in prison could be drastically reduced, and how a change in the pattern of public investment can increase the safety of our streets.

The launch of the report is set to coincide with the first public screening of The Fear Factory, a timely new documentary that exposes the history, mechanics and extent of populist fear mongering that has led to an unprecedented rise in the UK’s prison population. The film has given rise to a coalition of over 40 organisations, including the Prison Reform Trust and nef, which calls for an end to the political arms race on law and order.

The report found that:

•    England and Wales imprison proportionally more under-aged children than almost all other Western European countries. Relatively minor offences can result in custodial sentences: research by Barnardo’s showed that 82% of 12-14 year-olds in custody had never committed a violent offence.

•    Serving a prison sentence makes it more likely for children to continue offending after they have been released.

•    Time spent in prison also makes it more likely for children to be unemployed in the future, to have lower income, be disconnected from education and have unstable living conditions

•    Holding a child in prison costs about £100,000 a year. The report also shows that the harmful consequences of imprisonment result in at least £40,000 of further indirect costs to the state. These include continuing crime and higher unemployment after release.

The authors make recommendations about how to change the situation, to deliver better value for taxpayers, safer streets and a better deal for excluded young people:

•    Devolve budgets for prison places to local authorities. At the moment, prison places are paid for by central government. Transferring the costs to local governments – together with more power over how they can arrange youth justice services locally – would remove the perverse incentive to put young people in prison. The councils would be allowed to keep some of the savings created from reducing custody, which could be reinvested in the reduction of crime.

•    Local authorities can reduce the use of imprisonment by 13% without need for controversial legislative change or a large increase in public spending. The policies considered include better co-operation between local agencies and courts, and using interventions of restorative justice that allow offenders to repair the damage they have caused in the community. These changes can result in over £60 million of savings in England, and over £2 million for some local authority areas.

"These important findings support the case for diverting vulnerable young people away from prison whenever possible," said Juliet Lyon, Director of the Prison Reform Trust.  "Too many children who are not a threat to public safety are put away behind bars. To prevent the unnecessary and expensive imprisonment of young people, we need to change how we spend public money. Devolving budgets for prison places to local authorities would encourage them to deal with minor offending in the community, instead of relying on a central prison system. Community measures reduce offending much more effectively than any length of prison sentence. At a time of economic belt tightening across the public sector, they are also less of a drain on the tax payer. Scarce resources should be directed towards the welfare of children and their neighbourhoods - stopping crime before it starts and reducing the need for prison."

“Prison costs the public purse about six times more than sending a child to Eton,” said Aleksi Knuutila, researcher at nef and author of the report. “What really makes our obsessive use of prisons even more of a tragedy is that those resources could have been used to tackle crime much more effectively. The resources we now waste on locking children up could be spent on measures that would really keep our streets safer. All the research shows that prison is failing to rehabilitate offenders and isn’t steering them away from crime. At a time when public services are being cut everywhere, we need to ask whether our spending is really delivering on safety in our neighbourhoods.”