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We scored state prison systems and the federal Bureau of Prisons on almost 30 data points and 16 factors to measure their response to the COVID-19 pandemic, with a maximum possible score of 445 points.
7 kwi 2021 · Economy Apr 7, 2021 5:18 PM EST. The U.S. spends $81 billion a year on mass incarceration, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, and that figure might be an underestimate. In 2017, the...
4 paź 2023 · The states with the highest average annual costs per state prison inmate are New York ($69,000), California ($81,000), Connecticut ($60,000) and Massachusetts ($73,000). High costs are driven by large staffs, infrastructure expenses, inmate healthcare and correctional officer salaries and benefits.
19 kwi 2023 · As the number of people sentenced to jails and prisons has skyrocketed, government agencies have found themselves unable to pay for the associated costs. While the nation’s incarcerated population peaked in 2009, decades of deepening mass incarceration’s hold on the nation resulted in runaway costs.
17 kwi 2024 · States incarcerated more than 1 million people [1] at the end of 2021, according to Bureau of Justice Statistics data. To house them, state governments spent a combined $64.0 billion (inflation-adjusted). Spending per prisoner varies more than tenfold across states, from just under $23,000 per person in Arkansas to $307,468 in Massachusetts.
Key Statistics: Total U.S. government expenses on public prisons and jails: $80.7 billion +. On private prisons and jails: $3.9 billion +. Growth in justice system expenditures, 1982-2012 (adjusted for inflation): 310% +. Number of companies that profit from mass incarceration: ~4,000 +.
16 lip 2020 · As shown in the following chart, local governments pay more than half of the total costs—mostly for policing, while the federal government pays just one-sixth. States spend the most on corrections, a reflection of the fact that nearly 60 percent of all detainees (1.3 million people) are held in state prisons.