The parents of a 14-year-old boy who carried out a mass shooting at a Belgrade school in 2023 have been sentenced to substantial prison terms in a retrial that has sent shockwaves through European legal circles. This development coincides with Whitehall’s renewed focus on child safety laws, prompting comparisons between continental judicial approaches and Britain’s own regulatory landscape.
Vladimir and Milica Kecmanović, whose son killed nine classmates and a security guard before turning the gun on himself, were each handed 12-year sentences for gross negligence. The court found that they failed to secure the weapons used in the attack - two pistols legally owned by the father - and ignored clear warning signs about their son’s mental state. The retrial, ordered after an initial lenient sentence provoked public outrage, underscores a growing judicial willingness to hold parents accountable for their children’s actions.
Across the Channel, British policymakers are watching closely. The government recently revived its Online Safety Bill, now the Online Safety Act, which places a duty of care on tech platforms to protect children from harmful content. But critics argue that the legislation, while addressing online radicalisation, neglects the real-world factors that enable such tragedies: lax gun control, inadequate mental health support, and parental responsibility.
From a fiscal perspective, the societal cost of school shootings is staggering. The direct costs - police response, court proceedings, and incarceration - run into millions, but the indirect costs are far greater: lost productivity, trauma counselling, and the erosion of social trust. In the US, estimates place the economic toll of gun violence at over $280 billion annually. While UK rates are lower, the rising prevalence of mass stabbings and school threats suggests we are not immune.
The Serbian case raises uncomfortable questions about market efficiency in the safety sector. If parents face financial ruin for negligence, do we see a rational deterrent effect? Or does it simply shift liability onto those least able to bear it? The insurance industry has yet to price in such catastrophic risks, but if this precedent spreads, we could see a spike in premiums for gun ownership and a tightening of liability terms.
Central banks rarely comment on social policy, but the Bank of England’s Financial Stability Report has warned about 'tail risks' from social unrest. A single school shooting can trigger capital flight, depress consumer confidence, and strain public finances. Just look at how the 1999 Columbine shooting rattled US markets: the S&P 500 dropped 3% in the week following, and it took months to recover. In a globally connected economy, no country is an island.
The UK’s approach has been characteristically cautious. The Home Office quietly funded a pilot study on 'multi-agency safeguarding hubs' that flag at-risk youth, but implementation has been patchy. Meanwhile, the Treasury eyes the cost-benefit analysis: spending on early intervention is cheap compared to the lifelong burden of a single tragedy. Yet the political calculus remains skewed toward reactive measures - it’s easier to pass a law after a crisis than to prevent one.
What the Serbian retrial tells us is that markets are ultimately driven by expectations of punishment. If parents believe they will face serious consequences, they will internalise the costs of responsible gun storage and mental health monitoring. But that requires a legal system willing to impose those costs. In the UK, where gun ownership is already tightly restricted, the lesson may be more applicable to other domains: knife sales, online platforms, and even school bullying.
As gilt yields fluctuate and inflation lurks, the market volatility we should really fear is the human kind. The Serbian verdict is a reminder that the bottom line of any society is its willingness to enforce accountability - not just for the perpetrators, but for those who enable them. Whether the UK’s child safety laws will provide that deterrence remains an open question. For now, the markets will watch, wait, and price in the risk.








