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NEP: New Economics Papers - Social Norms and Social Capital - Digest, Vol 111, Issue 4

In this issue we feature 8 current papers on the theme of social capital, chosen by Fabio Sabatini (Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”):

  1. Does exposure to violence affect reciprocity? Experimental evidence from the West Bank Elisa Cavatorta; Daniel John Zizzo; Yousef Daoud
  2. Dishonesty and Risk-Taking: Compliance Decisions of Individuals and Groups Fochmann, Martin; Kocher, Martin G.; Müller, Nadja; Wolf, Nadja
  3. Peer Effects in Academic Research: Senders and Receivers Clément Bosquet; Pierre-Philippe Combes; Emeric Henry; Thierry Mayer
  4. Peer Effects in Secondary Education: Evidence from the 2015 Trends in Mathematics and Science Study Based on Homophily Bernhard C. Dannemann
  5. Marriage, work, and migration: The role of infrastructure development and gender norms Amirapu Amrit; Asadullah Niaz; Wahhaj Zaki
  6. Leadership in a Public Goods Experiment with Permanent and Temporary Members Angelova, Vera; Güth, Werner; Kocher, Martin G.
  7. Linguistic Traits and Human Capital Formation Galor, Oded; Özak, Ömer; Sarid, Assaf 8. A community based program promotes sanitation María Laura Alzúa; Habiba Djebbari; Amy J. Pickering

1. Does exposure to violence affect reciprocity? Experimental evidence from the West Bank Elisa Cavatorta (Department of Political Economy, King's College London, United Kingdom); Daniel John Zizzo (School of Economics, University of Queensland); Yousef Daoud (Doha Institute for Graduate Studies and Birzeit University)

This paper studies how reciprocity is affected by exposure to political violence in early age. We combine a research design that isolates the exogenous exposure to violence with a lab-in-the-field experiment to study how reciprocity in the forms of conditional cooperation and vindictive behavior in adolescents varies as a result of exposure to violence. We focus on young Palestinians in the West Bank region of the Palestinian territories. We find that exposure to violence affects reciprocity of Palestinian adolescents: those more exposed to violence engage in more reciprocal behavior in both the domain of cooperation and that of aggression. Part of the effect is explained by changes in the beliefs about their peers' behavior. JEL: C72 C91 D91 I25 Keywords: reciprocity; cooperation; conflict; violence; Palestine. Date: 2020–01–10 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:qld:uq2004:614&r=soc

2. Dishonesty and Risk-Taking: Compliance Decisions of Individuals and Groups Fochmann, Martin (Freie Universität Berlin and University of Cologne); Kocher, Martin G. (Institute for Advanced Studies, Vienna, University of Vienna, and University of Gothenburg); Müller, Nadja (University of Cologne); Wolf, Nadja (University of Hannover)

Unethical behavior in organizations is usually associated with the risk of negative consequences for the organization and for the involved managers if being detected. The existing experimental literature in economics has so far mainly focused on the analysis of unethical behavior in environments that involve no fines or similar monetary consequences. In the current paper, we use a tax compliance framework to study (un-)ethical behavior of individuals and small groups. Our results show that groups are clearly less compliant than individuals. The risk of being detected is the most important aspect in the group communication process when deciding on compliance. JEL: C91 C92 D03 H26 Keywords: Dishonesty, lying, compliance, risk-taking, group decisions, communication, norms, experiment Date: 2019–08 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ihs:ihswps:8&r=soc

3. Peer Effects in Academic Research: Senders and Receivers Clément Bosquet (Spatial Economic Research Center); Pierre-Philippe Combes (Département d'économie); Emeric Henry (Département d'économie); Thierry Mayer (Département d'économie)

Using an instrument based on a national contest in France determining researchers’ location, we find evidence of peer effects in academia, when focusing on precise groups of senders (producing the spillovers) and receivers (benefiting from the spillovers), defined based on field of specialisation, gender and age. These peer effects are shown to exist even outside formal co-authorship relationships. Furthermore, the match between the characteristics of senders and receivers plays a critical role. In particular, men benefit a lot from peer effects provided by men, while all other types of gender combinations produce spillovers twice as small. JEL: I23 J16 J24 Keywords: Economics of Science; Peer Effects; Research Productivity; Gender Publication Gap Date: 2019–11 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:spo:wpmain:info:hdl:2441/65v9ag2jfn865abjgaljmq2qi9&r=soc

4. Peer Effects in Secondary Education: Evidence from the 2015 Trends in Mathematics and Science Study Based on Homophily Bernhard C. Dannemann (University of Oldenburg, Department of Economics)

In the research on peer effects, unweighted mean classroom performance is the predominant measure used in the estimation of education production functions. In this paper, based on the sociological concept of homophily, I introduce social network matrices that correspond to a weighting scheme for peers in the same class at school. Using spatial regression techniques, I confirm the presence of peer effects for the eighth grade population in the USA in the TIMSS 2015 student assessment. For students, the likelihood of cooperation increases conditionally on visible and non-visible characteristics, such as age, gender,migratory background, and attitudes towards scholastic achievement. This grouping behavior is found to affect the spillover effects of student variables, such as gender and language skills. The main findings are robust to various definitions of the social network matrix, as well as to the inclusion of teacher fixed effects. Keywords: Human Capital, Cognitive Skills, Peer Effects, Spatial Model, Class Heterogeneity, Education Production Function Date: 2020–02 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:old:dpaper:428&r=soc

5. Marriage, work, and migration: The role of infrastructure development and gender norms Amirapu Amrit; Asadullah Niaz; Wahhaj Zaki

Traditional gender norms can restrict independent migration by women, preventing them from taking advantage of economic opportunities in urban non-agricultural industries. However, women may be able to circumvent such restrictions by using marriage to engage in long-distance migrationâ۠if they are wealthy enough to match with the desirable migrating grooms.Guided by a model in which women make marriage and migration decisions jointly, we hypothesize that marriage and labour markets will be inextricably linked by the possibility of marital migration. We use the construction of a major bridge in Bangladeshâ۠which dramatically reduced travel time between the economically deprived north-western region and the industrial belt around Dhakaâ۠as a source of plausibly exogenous variation in migration costs.In accordance with our model’s predictions, we find that the bridge construction induced marriage-related migration (not economic migration) among rural women, but only for those women coming from families above a poverty threshold. Keywords: Marriage markets,Migration,gender norms,Female labour force participation Date: 2019 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:unu:wpaper:wp-2019-92&r=soc

6. Leadership in a Public Goods Experiment with Permanent and Temporary Members Angelova, Vera (Technische Universität Berlin, Germany); Güth, Werner (Max-Planck-Institute for Research on Collective Goods, Bonn, Germany); Kocher, Martin G. (Institute for Advanced Studies, Vienna, University of Vienna, Austria and University of Gothenburg, Sweden)

We experimentally analyze leading by example in a public goods game with two permanent and two temporary group members. Our results show that leadership when permanent and temporary members interact leads to lower contributions than interaction without leadership. JEL: C91 D03 D64 Keywords: Cooperation; leadership; social dilemma; public goods provision; experiment Date: 2019–11 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ihs:ihswps:10&r=soc

7. Linguistic Traits and Human Capital Formation Galor, Oded (Brown University); Özak, Ömer (Southern Methodist University); Sarid, Assaf (University of Haifa)

This research establishes the influence of linguistic traits on human behavior. Exploiting variations in the languages spoken by children of migrants with identical ancestral countries of origin, the analysis indicates that the presence of periphrastic future tense, and its association with long-term orientation has a significant positive impact on educational attainment, whereas the presence of sex-based grammatical gender, and its association with gender bias, has a significant adverse impact on female educational attainment. JEL: D91 I25 J16 J24 Z10 Z13 Keywords: human capital, long-term orientation, gender bias, periphrastic future tense, sex-based grammatical gender, culture, language Date: 2020–01 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp12894&r=soc

8. A community based program promotes sanitation María Laura Alzúa (CEDLAS-FCE-Universidad Nacional de la Plata – Conicet, La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina); Habiba Djebbari (Aix-Marseille Univ, CNRS, EHESS, Ecole Centrale, AMSE, Marseille, France.); Amy J. Pickering (Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tufts University, Medford, MA)

Basic sanitation facilities are still lacking in large parts of the developing world, engendering serious environmental health risks. Interventions commonly deliver in-kind or cash subsidies to promote private toilet ownership. In this paper, we assess an intervention that provides information and behavioral incentives to encourage villagers in rural Mali to build and use basic latrines. Using an experimental research design and carefully measured indicators of use, we find a sizeable impact from this intervention: latrine ownership and use almost doubled in intervention villages, and open defecation was reduced by half. Our results partially attribute these effects to increased knowledge about cheap and locally available sanitation solutions. They are also associated with shifts in the social norm governing sanitation. Taken together, our findings, unlike previous evidence from other contexts, suggest that a progressive approach that starts with ending open defecation and targets whole communities at a time can help meet the new Sustainable Development Goal of ending open defecation. Keywords: sanitation, behavioral change, community-based intervention, social norm Date: 2020–01 URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:aim:wpaimx:1857&r=soc


This nep-soc issue is ©2020 by Fabio Sabatini. It is provided as is without any express or implied warranty. It may be freely redistributed in whole or in part for any purpose. If distributed in part, please include this notice.

General information on the NEP project can be found at http://nep.repec.org.

For comments please write to the director of NEP, Marco Novarese at <director at nep.repec.org>. Put “NEP” in the subject, otherwise your mail may be rejected. NEP’s infrastructure is sponsored by the School of Economics and Finance of Massey University in New Zealand.

 

 

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