Incarceration Rates

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Incarceration Rates Since 2002, the United States has had the highest incarceration rate in the world. In comparison to other countries whose natural rate is a hundred prisoners per one hundred thousand residents, the United States are five hundred prisoners per hundred thousand residents. There are now more people under “correctional supervision” in America, than there were in the Gulag Archipelago under Stalin at its height. Though some believe that the crime rates in the United States have been on a steady decline since 1990, the truth is the incarceration rate in the United States are now at a historically unprecedented level, because low-income individuals are more likely to be victims of crime, the majority of criminal offenders is …show more content…

In nineteen eighty, roughly seventy seven dollars was spent by United States residents on cost for inmates, in 2013, it was reported that number went up to nearly two hundred and sixty dollars per person in the United States. It is found that nearly two thirds of these outrageous costs are for security and inmate health care. Since 2001, the average annual cost has increased by about $19,500, this includes an increase of $8,300 for inmate health and $7,000 for security. Charitable Trust found that forty four states in the United States spent 6.5 billion dollars on health care for inmates in 2008. Studies show that in California alone, it cost nearly forty seven thousand dollars a year to incarcerate an inmate. Prisons do need some money, however, these high levels of income spent on inmates takes away from things such as education and methods to reduce the rates of crime. The total cost to taxpayers is 39 billion dollars. Although many states and the country as a whole are still dealing with these high cost and incarceration rates, they are working to fix these problems all while keeping the public’s safety in …show more content…

Although there is always a reason someone is placed behind bars, sometimes there are the ones who do not have a reason. However, not only are these rates astounding and troubling to the economy, but they are also affecting the prisons themselves by overcrowding. For example, a jail in Florida is capable of holding about one hundred and fifty inmates, but is currently housing close to two hundred and thirty. Overcrowding got so bad in California that the Supreme Court ruled in “cruel and unusual punishment” not long ago. Proven programming and treatment is a more appropriate response to certain offenses. One solution to this is to send fewer people to prison for drug charges, or at least reduce the time they are required to serve. Another suggestion would be to require offenders to serve seventy percent of their sentence instead of the eighty five percent the “truth-in-sentencing” states. A major fix would be to send foreign offenders back to their home countries. Studies have shown that by these tragedies the federal government could save billions and stop endangering the lives of inmates and correction officers due to

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