di matteo argues that focusing solely on homicide rates (and, one might add, the fact canada does not have a history of mass shootings comparable to the u.s.) has often left canadians “comfortably self-assured that (canada) is a peaceable kingdom marked by less crime” than the u.s., consistent with our national identity of “peace, order and good government” compared to its american counterpart of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
but when it comes to property crimes (burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft, etc.), di matteo’s study says, canada’s 2,491 crimes per 100,000 in 2022– a 7% increase from 2014 — was 27.5% higher than the 1,954.4 crimes per 100,000 recorded in the u.s. in 2022, which has decreased by 24.1% since 2014.
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similarly, the overall violent crime rate in canada including murder, robbery and assault with a weapon — adjusted for differences in how the two countries define violent crime — di matteo says, shows canada’s rate of 434.1 crimes per 100,000 in 2022, a 43.8% increase from 2014, has in recent years surpassed the u.s. violent crime rate of 380.7 crimes per 100,000 in 2022 — a 5.3% increase since 2014 — by 14%.
beyond the figures cited in di matteo’s study, it’s clear that a growing number of canadians are concerned about crime, regardless of comparisons to what is happening in the u.s. and despite assurances from governments, criminologists, criminal lawyers and others that crime in canada is at historic lows compared to previous decades.