Alabama’s Homicide Rate is More than Double New York City

A lot of people think New York City is an especially high-crime city. Including some US Senators. Here’s senior Senator from Alabama:

Ignore the weird obsession with Biden’s ice cream habit. The Senator is concerned that NYC is not safe.

But what’s the reality? Here’s a map showing the homicide rate in each state, and its relative position to NYC (data is from the CDC for 2022, the most recent complete year available right now).

The light-colored states have a lower homicide rate than NYC (5.2 deaths per 100,000). There’s 18 of those states. But most states have higher homicide rates than NYC. Some are a lot higher, even triple NYC in a few states (colored purple). Alabama’s homicide rate of 13.9 deaths per 100,000 people is about 2.5 times as high as New York City.

But perhaps the homicide rates in these states are being driven by high homicide rates in cities in those states? Comparing a city to a state is perhaps a little strange to do, but I also often hear this retort: well, it’s those cities, especially “Democrat-controlled” cities, that are driving the high homicide rate in Alabama and elsewhere. And while this is true to a certain extent, comparing rural counties to New York City doesn’t make Alabama and the South look much better:

For this map I combined 2021 and 2022 data, because the CDC doesn’t report very small numbers (usually under 10 deaths), so grouping two years is needed to get more data. Even so, there are still a handful of states that don’t have enough homicides for CDC to report them over that two-year period, and they are shown in gray on the map (as well as states that have no rural counties: Delaware, Rhode Island, and New Jersey).

Notice that even focusing on just the rural counties, there are almost 20 states with higher murder rates than New York City. Again, some are double or even triple. Rural Alabama, at 11 deaths per 100,000 people, is exactly double NYC. Notably, the entirety of the rural South is higher than NYC.

If this is all true, why might New York City feel less safe? There are a number of possible explanations, but I’ll offer a few. First, homicide isn’t the only kind of crime. While it does correlate with other crimes, it’s not a 1:1 relationship, so it’s likely that some places with higher homicide rates than NYC have lower levels of assault, rape, or property crimes. These are even more challenging to compare across jurisdictions, but it’s a possible explanation. Related, NYC is a relatively safe big city! Other big cities wouldn’t compare as favorably to Alabama. But folks just seem to love NYC as a punching bag.

The other explanation is just the sheer number of people, and therefore homicides. According to the CDC, NYC had 434 homicides in 2022, that’s an average of more than one per day. You could literally turn on the news every single day and hear about a murder, and perhaps you had even been in the neighborhood where it happened recently. Contrast rural Alabama, which had 65 homicides in 2022. That’s only about one per week. And it might be happening in a completely different part of the state from you, so you either don’t hear about it or think “that’s somewhere else.”

But rural Alabama only has about 600,000 people. NYC has fourteen times as many people. So if we are trying to answer the question “What are the odds that a random person is murdered in a given year?”, we need to take population into account. That’s the logic of reporting homicide rates. Indeed it may feel like NYC is less safe, and that’s a natural human reaction. But that’s why the data is so important, to give us a sense of proportion.