Bonger, Willem - Capitalism and Crime

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Encyclopedia of

Criminological Theory
Bonger, Willem: Capitalism and Crime

Contributors: Amy Stichman


Editors: Francis T. Cullen & Pamela Wilcox
Book Title: Encyclopedia of Criminological Theory
Chapter Title: "Bonger, Willem: Capitalism and Crime"
Pub. Date: 2010
Access Date: September 12, 2014
Publishing Company: SAGE Publications, Inc.
City: Thousand Oaks
Print ISBN: 9781412959186
Online ISBN: 9781412959193
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781412959193.n27
Print pages: 99-101
©2010 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
This PDF has been generated from SAGE knowledge. Please note that the pagination
of the online version will vary from the pagination of the print book.
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©2010 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. SAGE knowledge

http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781412959193.n27
In the early 20th century, scholars examining the causes of crime tended to see the
roots of criminal behavior as products of people's free will or of other causes lying within
the individual. Willem Bonger, a Dutch sociologist, took a different approach and argued
that crime was caused by societal factors, specifically the economy and its effects on
people. In creating his argument, he was influenced by theorists such as Karl Marx and
Fredrick Engels, and he explored the links between crime and economics in his text
Criminality and Economic Conditions (original version: 1905; English version: 1916). In
this book, Bonger argued that the capitalist economic structure can have a detrimental
influence on society and can create criminal behavior and allow it to flourish. Many
scholars view Bonger as a founding father of critical criminology.

Origins of Bonger's Approach


In building his argument that the causes of crime have a basis in society in Criminality
and Economic Conditions, Bonger first critiqued the more common viewpoint at the time
that crime was caused by factors resting within the individual, either because of their
free will to choose their own actions, including criminal behaviors, or by their biological
makeup. In developing this argument, Bonger explored a number of scholars who
had examined the causes of crime from various standpoints, including philosophers,
spiritualists, biologists, sociologists, and bio-sociologists, and he compared each
school's discussion of the origins of crime. Bonger refuted each school's claims and
noted that the link between crime and the economic conditions in a country was the
most compelling argument. One basis for his reasoning was that many of those authors
who have examined this link agree that economy and crime are related, even if other
factors, such as morality or imitation of others’ criminal behavior, are more important.
Only a small proportion of the cited authors argued that there is no relationship between
crime and economic conditions.

Many of the above authors looked at economic conditions solely in terms of the amount
of poverty and wealth in a country. In contrast, Bonger believed that to understand how
these conditions can influence crime, scholars need to look at distribution of wealth in a
country rather than the total amount of wealth. In other words, a country that is wealthy
overall may still have a high crime rate if there are people who are impoverished

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Willem: Capitalism and Crime
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alongside people who are very wealthy. Bonger then described that the economic
conditions of a country build the social structure of that country. The economic condition
that is a key cause of a society's crime is modern capitalism.

Although Marx and Engels did not have a primary focus on crime and law, they did
mention some aspects of crime that Bonger further expanded upon. People will produce
goods and services to meet their survival needs, such as food and shelter. In a capitalist
society, some individuals will own and control the means of production; they are the
people who own the factories and businesses that distribute goods and service and
are referred to as the bourgeoisie. Other individuals have only their own labor to trade
for other goods and services; these are the workers (the proletariat). Social classes
developed as a result of this differential access to goods and services. In a capitalist
society, therefore, some individuals will have money and that money can translate into
power to distribute resources at will; other individuals will lack money. Those people
who have the power want to keep it, mainly through exploiting the labor of those who do
not have power, and those who do not have the power will struggle against those who
do. One's status in society is not due to one's innate capacity but rather is the result of
capitalism, which creates differences in money and power.

Capitalism is not the sole economic structure that can lead to the gap between rich and
poor; under capitalism, however, the distance between rich and poor has increased to a
larger extent and continues to increase. As support for his argument, Bonger examined
problems such as poverty and illiteracy in various European countries for many years
and compared these to the countries’ [p. 99 ↓ ] crime rates. With a few exceptions, he
found that as poverty or illiteracy increase, so does the amount of crime.

The Downside of Capitalism


A primary purpose of capitalism is for people to make a profit. Under capitalism,
production is for the sake of exchange rather than for personal consumption. In other
words, people do not use the goods they produce; they exchange those goods for
money or other goods or services. In any exchange, people try to maximize their own
profit while minimizing the profits of others. Capitalism has benefits, including the fact
that all people have the potential to obtain wealth and that a competitive market makes

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products better and cheaper. However, there is a societal drawback. The capitalist
mode of production creates and fosters egoism in people. Egoism refers to placing
one's own self-interests above the interests of others; it is the opposite of altruism,
which refers to placing the interests of others above those of oneself. According to
Bonger, humans are intrinsically altruistic, and he based this assumption from an
examination of helping behaviors of other animals and by looking at more “primitive”
human societies, mainly Native American tribes, which were described as kind,
hospitable, and focused on helping each other.

Bonger highlighted that egoism itself does not make people criminal but can make
people more capable of crime. Capitalism either creates or reinforces egoism by
lessening any altruistic instincts and by weakening the “moral force in man which
combats the inclination towards egoistic acts” including criminal ones (p. 532). The
change toward capitalism drives people to be more ambitious and greedier and to
develop “egoism at the expense of altruism” (p. 401). When people are looking out
for themselves above all others, they lose compassion for others and “a great part of
morality disappears” (p. 532).

Although egoism is the primary cause of crime under capitalism, crime also occurs as
a result of the demoralization of people who live in poorer conditions. Bonger described
various social institutions, such as marriage and family, and how capitalism can weaken
these institutions. For example, women must marry in order to obtain social and
financial security; those who are unable to attain financial security in that way may turn
to prostitution. Bourgeois children are spoiled by luxury, whereas proletariat children
are not taught proper morals that would keep them out of crime. He argued that the
children of the proletariat need to work in factories to help earn money for their families,
thereby lessening prosocial intellectual and moral education. Instead, their work brings
them into contact with older people who may teach them poor moral values and egoism,
which in turn leads to the greater likelihood of crime. Many poorer children will be raised
in this poor environment in which they have little education other than beatings from
their parents, which can habituate them to violence; therefore, a tendency to violence
is taught at a young age. By the effects of capitalism destroying the traditional cultural
values and informal social controls, and promoting hedonism and selfishness, people
are no longer prevented from committing harmful acts. Crime becomes a rational
response to capitalist exploitation.

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The Breadth of Bonger's Theory


The problems of capitalism can be used to explain a variety of crimes, from minor
crimes to more serious offenses. For example, vagrancy and begging are more
common under capitalism because there will always be some people who are unable
to sell their labor. Furthermore, Bonger noted that as an example of how poorly paid
some laborers are, it can even be more profitable to beg than to work. Next, because in
a capitalist society having possessions can be viewed as success, people who cannot
afford these possessions may turn to crime, especially theft, to attain greater status in
the views of others. As an example of violent crime, the economic situation influences
the amount of rape by affecting whether people can marry; marriage, in turn, limits
these crimes. Members of the proletariat are less likely to be able to afford to marry,
and therefore must satisfy their sexual urges illegally. Women's inferior social position
along with alcoholism, a more common affliction among the proletariat, and “sexual
demoralization and lack of civilization” can lead members of the proletariat to rape (p.
620).

Through applying the above arguments regarding the influence of economy on social
structure, Bonger can explain the causes of crime within a [p. 100 ↓ ] society as well
as variation of criminality across different societies, as capitalist societies will have
more crime compared to countries with more equal distribution of wealth. Because the
problems of capitalism can influence both the wealthy and the poor, Bonger explored
not only crimes by the working class but also those of the people in power. Wealthier
people could, for example, steal a large amount of other people's money, partly
because of their opportunity to have access to other's money (e.g., in working in a bank)
and partly because egoism stimulates greed for all classes.

The Economic Solution to Crime


In order to eliminate most crime, Bonger advocated for a society based on community
support and a lack of material poverty. Culture, intellect, and wealth should not be
limited to the benefit of some people but rather should be enjoyed by all. If an economic

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system like capitalism is the cause or rein-forcer of people's self interestedness, then
an economic system that supports altruism would lessen people's egoism. According
to Bonger, an economic system such as socialism, or one in which people have more
equal footing economically, would support altruism and, in turn, reduce rates of crime.

AmyStichman

http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781412959193.n27
See also

• Currie, Elliott: The Market Society and Crime


• Greenberg, David F.: Age, Capitalism, and Crime
• Marx, Karl, and Frederick Engels: Capitalism and Crime
• Spitzer, Steven: Capitalism and Crime
• Taylor, Ian, Paul Walton, and Jock Young: The New Criminology

References and Further Readings

Antonaccio, O., and Tittle, C. R. A cross-national test of Bonger's theory of criminality


and economic conditions . Criminology 45 925–958. (2007). http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/
j.1745-9125.2007.00098.x

Bonger, W. (1916) Criminality and economic conditions . Boston: Little, Brown. (Original
work published 1905)

Chamlin, M. B., and Cochran, J. K. Economic inequality, legitimacy, and


cross-national homicide rates . Homicide Studies 10 231–252. (2006). http://
dx.doi.org/10.1177/1088767906292642

Mike, B. Willem Adriaan Bonger's “Criminality and Economic Conditions”: A critical


analysis . International Journal of Criminology and Penology 4 211–238. (1976).

Neapolitan, J. Differing theoretical perspectives and cross-national variation in thefts in


less developed nations . International Criminal Justice Review 5 17–31. (1995). http://
dx.doi.org/10.1177/105756779500500102

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Taylor, I., Walton, P., & Young, J. (1973). The new criminology: For a
social theory of deviance . London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. http://
dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203405284

Van Bremmelen, J. M. Pioneers in criminology. VIII. Willem Adriaan Bonger (1987–


1940) . The Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology, and Police Science 46 293–302.
(1955). http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1139414

Van Swaaningen, R. Reclaiming critical criminology: Social justice and


European tradition . Theoretical Criminology 3 5–28. (1999). http://
dx.doi.org/10.1177/1362480699003001001

Wright, R. A. Left out? The coverage of critical perspectives in introductory


criminology textbooks, 1900–1999 . Critical Criminology 9 101–122. (2000). http://
dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02461040

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