I located a study with statistically treated data on gun ownership and its correlation with different measures of freedom and prosperity.
Here are some highlights (Don Hank):
Table 1: Firearms Ownership versus Liberty Indices, by quartile
Quartile
|
Firearms Per 1,000 Population
|
Freedom Index (1-7, lower is better)
|
Corruption Index (0-10, higher is better)
|
Economic Index (0-100, higher is better)
|
1
|
388
|
1.93
|
7.09
|
69.79
|
2
|
145
|
2.80
|
4.35
|
63.59
|
3
|
81
|
2.53
|
4.75
|
62.57
|
4
|
24
|
2.32
|
4.31
|
63.03
|
Average 2-4
|
84
|
2.56
|
4.47
|
63.06
|
Table 2. Firearms Ownership versus Liberty Indices, by quintile
Quintile
|
Firearms Per 1,000 Population
|
Freedom Index (1-7. lower is better)
|
Corruption Index (0-10. higher is better)
|
Economic Index (0-100. higher is better)
|
Top Quintile
|
448
|
1.36
|
7.44
|
71.37
|
Quintile 2
|
180
|
2.83
|
5.33
|
66.73
|
Quintile 3
|
121
|
2.50
|
4.21
|
60.86
|
Quintile 4
|
64
|
2.96
|
4.37
|
61.35
|
Quintile 5
|
20
|
2.25
|
4.54
|
64.12
|
Quintiles 2-5
|
96
|
2.64
|
4.61
|
63.26
|
Table 3: Freedom Rating Versus Firearms and Other Indices
Freedom Rating
|
Freedom Index
|
Firearms Per 1,000 Population
|
Corruption Index
|
Economic Index
|
Free (1)
|
1.00
|
225
|
7.39
|
73.06
|
Free (>1)
|
2.04
|
81
|
3.99
|
61.29
|
All Free
|
1.33
|
180
|
6.32
|
69.34
|
Partly Free
|
3.57
|
129
|
3.09
|
57.80
|
Not Free
|
5.86
|
132
|
2.83
|
53.93
|
Finally, we tested the data for statistical significance. (The calculations are in the Appendix, Table 8.) We found three statistically significant relationships:
- more guns, less corruption;
- more guns, more economic freedom; and
- more guns, more economic success.
No comments:
Post a Comment