NEP: New Economics Papers - Social Norms and Social Capital - 28-07-2014
In this issue we feature 14 current papers on the theme of social capital:
This issue of nep-soc is sponsored by Timberlake Consultants, who invite you to attend the 2014 London Stata Autumn School, to be held at Cass Business School, London, UK, between 1-5 September 2014. Deadline is 31 August 2014.
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In this issue we have:
- Teaching Practices and Social Capital - Algan, Yann; Shleifer, Andrei
- The Importance of Being Marginal: Gender Differences in Generosity - Stefano DellaVigna; John List; Ulrike Malmendier; Gautam Rao
- Does corruption erode trust in government? Evidence from a recent surge of local scandals in Spain - Albert Solé-Ollé; Pilar Sorribas-Navarro
- It's A Sin - Contraceptive Use, Religious Beliefs, and Long-Run Economic Development - Prettner, Klaus; Strulik, Holger
- I Cannot Cheat on You after We Talk - Cristina Bicchieri; Alessandro Sontuoso; ;
- Who cooperates in repeated games: The role of altruism, inequity aversion, and demographics - Dreber-Almenberg, Anna; Fudenberg, Drew; Rand, David G.
- Reciprocity Networks and the Participation Problem - Martin Dufwenberg; Amrish Patel
- The Transmission of Democracy: From the Village to the Nation-State - Giuliano, Paola; Nunn, Nathan
- The Causal Effect of Market Priming on Trust: An Experimental Investigation Using Randomized Control - Al-Ubaydli, Omar; Houser, Daniel; Nye, John; Paganelli, Maria Pia; Pan, Xiaofei
- A Dirty Look From The Neighbors. Does Living In A Religious Neighborhood Prevent Cohabitation? Anna Baranowska-Rataj; Monika Mynarska; Daniele Vignoli
- The Coauthorship Network Analysis of the BI Norwegian Business School - Belik, Ivan; Jörnsten, Kurt
- Social Structure and Institutional Design: Evidence from a Lab Experiment in the Field - Emily Breza; Arun G. Chandrasekhar; Horacio Larreguy
- Robustness of norm-driven cooperation in the commons to environmental variability - Maja Schlüter; Alessandro Tavoni; Simon Levin
- Collective Action and Armed Group Presence in Colombia - Margarita Gáfaro; Ana Maria Ibáñez; Patricia Justino
Contents.
- Teaching Practices and Social Capital
- The Importance of Being Marginal: Gender Differences in Generosity
- Does corruption erode trust in government? Evidence from a recent surge of local scandals in Spain
Date: |
2014 |
By: |
Albert Solé-Ollé (Universitat de Barcelona & IEB) |
URL: |
http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ieb:wpaper:2013/6/doc2014-26&r=soc |
We examine whether a corruption scandal in which the incumbent is implicated undermines trust in local government. We use a novel dataset containing information on local corruption scandals reported in Spain during the period 1999-2009, and data on the level of trust expressed in local politicians drawn from a new survey conducted in late 2009. We use matching methods to improve the identification of the effect of corruption scandals on trust, comparing municipalities affected by a scandal with those presenting similar traits but in which no scandal had been reported. We find that corruption scandals have a marked negative effect on trust in local politicians. This effect is even more marked in the case of individuals that have no ideological attachment to the party accused of corruption and/or who obtain their information from the media. Several falsification tests, based on a sample of corruption scandals reported after the survey had been conducted, confirm the causal interpretation of these results. |
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Keywords: |
Corruption, trust |
JEL: |
- It's A Sin - Contraceptive Use, Religious Beliefs, and Long-Run Economic Development
Date: |
2014-07-07 |
By: |
Prettner, Klaus (Department of Economics) |
URL: |
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This study presents a novel theory on the interaction of social norms, fertility, education, and their joint impact on long-run economic development. The theory takes into account that sexual intercourse is utility enhancing and that the use of modern contraceptives potentially conflicts with prevailing social norms (religious beliefs). The theory motivates the existence of two steady states. At the traditional steady state, the economy stagnates, fertility is high, education is minimal, and the population sustains a norm according to which modern contraceptives are not used. At the modern steady state, the population has abandoned traditional beliefs, modern contraceptives are used, fertility is low and education and economic growth are high. Social dynamics explain why both equilibria are separated by a saddlepoint-equilibrium (a separatrix), i.e. why it is so hard to transit from the traditional regime to the modern regime. Enhancing the value of education is identified as a promising policy to encourage contraceptive use and to initiate the take-off to long-run growth. |
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Keywords: |
Religion; fertility; sex; contraceptive use; education; economic growth |
JEL: |
- I Cannot Cheat on You after We Talk
Date: |
2014-07 |
By: |
Cristina Bicchieri |
URL: |
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This is a draft of a chapter in a planned book on the Prisoner’s Dilemma, edited by Martin Peterson, to be published by Cambridge University Press. - Experimental evidence on pre-play communication supports a “focusing function of communication” hypothesis. Relevant communication facilitates cooperative, pro-social behavior because it causes a shift in individuals’ focus towards strategies dictated by some salient social norm. After reviewing the formal foundations for a general theory of conformity to social norms, we provide an original application illustrating how a framework that allows for different conjectures about norms is able to capture the focusing function of communication and to explain experimental results. |
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Keywords: |
social norms, social dilemmas |
JEL: |
- Who cooperates in repeated games: The role of altruism, inequity aversion, and demographics
- Reciprocity Networks and the Participation Problem
- The Transmission of Democracy: From the Village to the Nation-State
- The Causal Effect of Market Priming on Trust: An Experimental Investigation Using Randomized Control
- A Dirty Look From The Neighbors. Does Living In A Religious Neighborhood Prevent Cohabitation?
Date: |
2014 |
By: |
Anna Baranowska-Rataj (Institute of Statistics and Demography, Warsaw School of Economics, Sociology Department, Umea University) |
URL: |
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The aim of the paper is to provide insights into how religion influences the family formation process. In particular, we analyze the impact of a neighborhood context religiosity on an individual decision to enter cohabitation. We use the data on two European societies where secularization and individualization have not yet reached momentum: Italy and Poland. We combine the empirical evidence from both qualitative and quantitative research. The qualitative research provides an in-depth understanding of the mechanisms through which the neighborhood may affect the individual decisions on union formation. By means of quantitative multilevel analyses we test how strong these mechanisms are in the general population. The qualitative analysis identified several mechanisms related, among others, to a lack of social recognition for cohabiting couples and to ostracism in the neighborhood. The quantitative outcomes confirmed that individuals living in social environment where people are very religious tend to make life choices consistent with the norms and beliefs supported by the dominating religion, even if they are not very religious themselves. Importantly, after controlling for territorial characteristics, the role of neighborhood-specific religiosity weakened in the magnitude in Poland and lost its statistical power in Italy. This may indicate that the impact of religion on observed union formation behaviors is indirect: It does seem to influence observed family behaviors through the social pressure to get married and traditions, rather than through the force of Catholic dogmas. |
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Keywords: |
cohabitation, union formation, religiosity, social pressure |
JEL: |
- The Coauthorship Network Analysis of the BI Norwegian Business School
Date: |
2014-07-09 |
By: |
Belik, Ivan (Dept. of Business and Management Science, Norwegian School of Economics) |
URL: |
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We construct the coauthorship network based on the scientific collaboration between the faculty members at the Norwegian Business School (BI) and based on their international academic publication experience. The network structure is based on the BI faculties’ publications recognized by the ISI Web of Science for the period 1950 – Spring, 2014. The given network covers the publication activities of the BI faculty members (over eight departments) based on the information retrieved from the ISI Web of Science in Spring, 2014. In this paper we analyse the constructed coauthorship network in different aspects of the theory of social networks analysis. |
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Keywords: |
Coauthorship networks; social networks analysis |
JEL: |
- Social Structure and Institutional Design: Evidence from a Lab Experiment in the Field
Date: |
2014-07 |
By: |
Emily Breza |
URL: |
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In settings with poor formal contract enforcement, profitable investments are likely unrealized. While social closeness can mitigate contractual incompleteness, we examine how to improve the preponderance of cases where contracting parties cannot rely upon social ties. We ask if a community can enlist members to monitor transactions or punish offending parties. We conduct a laboratory experiment in 40 Indian villages, with 960 non-anonymized subjects, where we have social network data. Participants play modified sender-receiver investment games, with and without third-party monitors and punishers. We examine whether network centrality of the third party increases efficiency of interaction. Furthermore, we decompose the efficiency increase into a monitoring channel (central third parties are valuable since they may influence reputations) and an enforcement channel (central third parties may be more able to punish without fear of retaliation). Assigning a third party at the 75th percentile of the centrality distribution (as compared to the 25th) increases efficiency by 21% relative to the mean: we attribute 2/5 of the effect to monitoring and 3/5 to enforcement. The largest efficiency increase occurs when senders and receivers are socially distant, unable to maintain efficient levels autonomously. Results cannot be explained by demographics such as elite status, caste, wealth or gender. Our findings show not every member is equally well-equipped to be part of a local institution. Knowing that a central third party observes their interaction increases sender-receiver efficiency. More importantly, to be able to punish someone, the third party must be important in the community. |
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JEL: |
- Robustness of norm-driven cooperation in the commons to environmental variability
- Collective Action and Armed Group Presence in Colombia
Date: |
2014-07 |
By: |
Margarita Gáfaro (Brown University) |
URL: |
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The main objective of this paper is to provide empirical evidence on the mechanisms that shape the relationship between violent conflict and collective action. Conflict dynamics in Colombia allow us to exploit rich variation in armed group presence and individual participation in local organizations. Our identification strategy is based on the construction of contiguous-pairs of rural communities that share common socio-economic characteristics but differ in armed group presence. This allows us to control for unobservable variables that may affect local participation and conflict dynamics simultaneously. The results show that the presence of armed groups increases overall participation in local organizations, with a particularly strong effect on political organizations. Contrary to existing results, we find that stronger individual participation may arise from coercion exercised by armed groups and not from a more vibrant civil society. |
This nep–soc issue is ©2014 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, it must include this copyright notice. It may not be sold, or placed in something else for sale.
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NEP is sponsored by the Department of Economics, University of Auckland Business School.
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