NEP: New Economics Papers - Social Norms and Social Capital - 08-12-2014
In this issue we feature 13 current papers on the theme of social capital:
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In this issue we have:
- Giving in South Africa: Determining the influence of altruism, inequality aversion and social capital - Tirivayi J.N.
- Growth Strategy with Social Capital and Physical Capital- Theory and Evidence: the Case of Vietnam - Cuong Le Van; Anh Ngoc Nguyen; Ngoc-Minh Nguyen
- Relational Capability: A Multidimensional Approach - Gaël Giraud; Cécile Renouard; Hélène L'Huillier; Raphaële De La Martinière; Camille Sutter
- Inequality and trust: new evidence from panel data - Guglielmo Barone; Sauro Mocetti
- Norms Make Preferences Social - Erik Kimbrough; Alexander Vostroknutov
- Improving voluntary public good provision by a non-governmental, endogenous matching mechanism: Experimental evidence - Reif, Christiane; Rübbelke, Dirk; Löschel, Andreas
- Gender Differences in Honesty: Groups Versus Individuals - Muehlheusser, Gerd; Roider, Andreas; Wallmeier, Niklas
- Addiction and Network Influence - Michal Ksawery Popiel
- The perils of peer punishment: evidence from a common pool resource framed field experiment - de Melo, Gioia; Piaggio, Matías
- Social Investments, Informal Risk Sharing, and Inequality - Attila Ambrus; Arun G. Chandrasekhar; Matt Elliott
- Does team competition increase pro-social lending? Evidence from online microfinance - Chen, Roy; Chen, Yan; Liu, Yang; Mei, Qiaozhu
- Cultural Values and Decision to Work of Immigrant Women in Italy - Scoppa, Vincenzo; Stranges, Manuela
- Children as social network actors: Legal challenges concerning membership, behaviour and liability - Wauters, Ellen; Lievens, Eva; Valcke, Peggy
Contents.
- Giving in South Africa: Determining the influence of altruism, inequality aversion and social capital
Date: |
2014 |
By: |
Tirivayi J.N. (UNU-MERIT) |
URL: |
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I use data from the South African Social Giving Survey to investigate the role of social capital and motivations for giving to formal charities and beggars. Results suggest that both impure altruism and inequality aversion positively influence giving to formal charities but they have no influence on giving to beggars. The role of social capital is varied. Members of informal insurance groups are more likely to give to both charities and beggars, while members of formal community groups are more likely to give to charities only. Members of interest groups are actually less likely to donate to charities and prefer giving to beggars. |
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Keywords: |
Multiple or Simultaneous Equation Models: Cross-Sectional Models; Spatial Models; Treatment Effect Models; Quantile Regressions; Social Interaction Models; Multiple or Simultaneous Equation Models: Discrete Regression and Qualitative Choice Models; Discrete Regressors; Proportions; Altruism; Philanthropy; Public Goods; |
JEL: |
- Growth Strategy with Social Capital and Physical Capital- Theory and Evidence: the Case of Vietnam
Date: |
2014-02 |
By: |
Cuong Le Van (CES - Centre d'économie de la Sorbonne - CNRS : UMR8174 - Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne, EEP-PSE - Ecole d'Économie de Paris - Paris School of Economics - Ecole d'Économie de Paris, VCREME - VanXuan Center of Research in Economics, Management and Environment - VanXuan Center of Research in Economics, Management and Environment) |
URL: |
http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:halshs-01021376&r=soc |
We study the impact of social capital in both simple theoretical and empirical model with the main assumption is the price of physical capital is a decreasing function of social capital. In our theoretical model, there exists a critical value such that firm will not invest in social capital if its saving is lower than the critical value and otherwise. Moreover, the output depends positively and non-linearly on the social capital. Our empirical model that captures the impact of physical capital, human capital, and social capital using the database from Survey of Small and Medium Scale Manufacturing Enterprises (SMEs) in Vietnam 2011, confirms the conclusions of the theoretical model. |
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Keywords: |
- Relational Capability: A Multidimensional Approach
- Inequality and trust: new evidence from panel data
- Norms Make Preferences Social
Date: |
2014-10 |
By: |
Erik Kimbrough (Simon Fraser University) |
URL: |
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We explore the idea that prosocial behavior in experimental games is driven by social norms imported into the laboratory. Under this view, differences in behavior across subjects is driven by heterogeneity in sensitivity to social norms. We introduce an incentivized method of eliciting individual norm-sensitivity, and we show how it relates to play in public goods, trust, dictator and ultimatum games. We show how our observations can be rationalized in a stylized model of norm-dependent preferences under reasonable assumptions about the nature of social norms. Then we directly elicit norms in these games to test the robustness of our interpretation. |
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Keywords: |
experimental economics, norms, social preferences, conditional cooperation, reciprocity |
JEL: |
- Improving voluntary public good provision by a non-governmental, endogenous matching mechanism: Experimental evidence
Date: |
2014 |
By: |
Reif, Christiane |
URL: |
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Social norms can help to foster cooperation and to overcome the free-rider problem in private provision of public goods. This paper focuses on the enforcement of social norms by a self-introduced punishment and reward scheme. We analyse if subjects achieve to implement a norm-enforcement mechanism at their own expense by applying the theory of non-governmental norm-enforcement by Buchholz et al. (2014) in a laboratory experiment. Based on their theory without central authority and endogenously determined enforcement mechanism, we implement a two-stage public good game: At the first stage subjects determine the strength of penalty/reward on their own and in the second stage they decide on their contributions to the public good. We find that the mechanism by Buchholz et al. (2014) leads to a higher public good contribution than without the use of any mechanism. Only in a few cases groups end up with a zero enforcement mechanism. This result indicates that subjects are apparently willing to contribute funds for implementing an enforcement mechanism. Moreover, higher enforcement parameters lead to higher public good contributions in the second stage, although too high enforcement parameters lead to unreachable theoretical optima. |
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Keywords: |
laboratory experiment,public good,matching mechanism,social norms,norm enforcement |
JEL: |
- Gender Differences in Honesty: Groups Versus Individuals
Date: |
2014-08 |
By: |
Muehlheusser, Gerd (University of Hamburg) |
URL: |
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Extending the die rolling experiment of Fischbacher and Föllmi-Heusi (2013), we compare gender effects with respect to unethical behavior by individuals and by two-person groups. In contrast to individual decisions, gender matters strongly under group decisions. We find more lying in male groups and mixed groups than in female groups. |
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Keywords: |
unethical behavior, lying, group decisions, gender effects, experiment |
JEL: |
- Addiction and Network Influence
Date: |
2014-11 |
By: |
Michal Ksawery Popiel (Queen's University) |
URL: |
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Social networks are an important component in understanding the decision to consume addictive substances. They capture the role of limited access, peer influence, and social acceptance and tolerance. However, despite the empirical evidence of their role, they have been absent from theoretical models. This paper proposes a mechanism through which agents can influence each other in their decision to consume an addictive good. An agent's decision is sensitive to her state of addiction as well as to the composition of her neighbourhood. The model is consistent with the empirical evidence that peer influence can work in both ways: influencing an individual to use and helping them to quit. The structure of the network has important implications on the outcome of agents' decisions as well as the effectiveness of policies aimed at limiting use of addictive substances through deterrence. I provide a network-based explanation of why usage rates can vary across otherwise similar agents and show how in some situations encouraging network ties can lead to lower use while in others it can have the opposite effect. Furthermore, I explore the effect of networks on diffusion of addiction and, using simulations, find that addiction spreads faster in an environment where there are few strong links than in one with many weak links. |
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Keywords: |
addiction, dual-self, networks, random utility |
JEL: |
- The perils of peer punishment: evidence from a common pool resource framed field experiment
- Social Investments, Informal Risk Sharing, and Inequality
Date: |
2014-11 |
By: |
Attila Ambrus |
URL: |
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This paper studies costly network formation in the context of risk sharing. Neighboring agents negotiate agreements as in Stole and Zwiebel (1996), which results in the social surplus being allocated according to the Myerson value. We uncover two types of inefficiency: overinvestment in social relationships within group (e.g., caste, ethnicity), but underinvestment across group. We find a novel tradeoff between efficiency and equality. Both within and across groups, inefficiencies are minimized by increasing social inequality, which results in financial inequality and increasing the centrality of the most central agents. Evidence from 75 Indian village networks is congruent with our model. |
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JEL: |
- Does team competition increase pro-social lending? Evidence from online microfinance
Date: |
2014 |
By: |
Chen, Roy |
URL: |
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We investigate the effects of team competition on pro-social lending activity on Kiva.org, the first microlending website to match lenders with entrepreneurs in developing countries. Using naturally occurring field data, we find that lenders who join teams contribute 1.2 more loans ($30-$42) per month than those who do not. To further explore factors that differentiate successful teams from dormant ones, we run a large-scale randomized field experiment (n = 22, 233) by posting forum messages. Compared to the control, we find that lenders make significantly more loans when exposed to a goal-setting and coordination message, whereas goal-setting alone significantly increases lending activities of previously inactive teams. Our findings suggest that goal-setting and coordination are effective mechanisms to increase pro-social behavior in teams. |
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Keywords: |
social identity,pro-social lending,microfinance,field experiment |
JEL: |
- Cultural Values and Decision to Work of Immigrant Women in Italy
Date: |
2014-10 |
By: |
Scoppa, Vincenzo (University of Calabria) |
URL: |
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We investigate the role of culture in explaining economic outcomes at individual level analyzing how cultural values from the home country affect the decision to work of immigrants in Italy, using the National Survey of Households with Immigrants. Following the “epidemiological approach”, we relate the probability of being employed in Italy for immigrant women with the female labor force participation (LFP) in their country of origin, taken as a proxy of cultural heritage and gender role model. Controlling for a number of individual and household characteristics, we show that participation in the labor market is affected both by the culture of females' and by their husband's origin countries. We also show that the relationship between own decisions in the host country and home country LFP cannot be attributed to human capital quality or discrimination and it turns out to be stronger for immigrants that maintained more intense ties with their origin countries. Finally, we investigate to what extent cultural influence is driven by religious beliefs: we find that religion is a key determinant of differences in female labor decisions, but, besides religion, other cultural values exert additional influence. |
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Keywords: |
culture, immigration, labor force participation, epidemiological approach, gender, Italy |
JEL: |
- Children as social network actors: Legal challenges concerning membership, behaviour and liability
Date: |
2014 |
By: |
Wauters, Ellen |
URL: |
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