NEP: New Economics Papers - Social Norms and Social Capital - Digest, Vol 96, Issue 1
In this issue we feature 12 current papers on the theme of social capital, chosen by Fabio Sabatini (Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”):
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- The causal effect of trust - Bjorn Bartling; Ernst Fehr; David Huffman; Nick Netzer;
- Connecting to Power: Political Connections, Innovation, and Firm Dynamics - Ufuk Akcigit; Salom? Baslandze; Francesca Lotti;
- Religion, division of labor and conflict: Anti-semitism in Germany over 600 years - Sascha O. Becker; Luigi Pascali;
- Social capital at venture capital firms and their financial performance: Evidence from China - Qi-lin Cao; Hua-yun Xiang; You-jia Mao; Ben-zhang Yang;
- Knowing Me, Knowing You? Similarity to the CEO and Fund Managers' Investment Decisions - Jaspersen, Stefan; Limbach, Peter;
- Prosociality, Political Identity, and Redistribution of Earned Income: Theory and Evidence - Sanjit Dhami; Emma Manifold; Ali al-Nowaihi;
- Reasons for unmet needs for health care: the role of social capital and social support in some Western EU countries
Fiorillo, D.; - Where to look for the morals in markets? Matthias Sutter; Juergen Huber; Michael Kirchler; Matthias Stefan; Markus
Walzl; - Ctrl+C Ctrl+pay: Do people mirror payment behaviour of their peers Carin van der Cruijsen; Joris Knoben
- Gender Norms and Intimate Partner Violence - Libertad Gonzalez; Neria Rodr?guez-Planas;
- Social Image or Social Norm?: Re-examining the Audience Effect in Dictator Game Experiments - Chulyoung Kim; Sang-Hyun Kim;
- Trust in Leadership and Affective Commitment as a Mediator between Servant Leadership Behavior and Extra-Role Behavior of Teachers - Titik Rosnani
1. The causal effect of trust - Bjorn Bartling; Ernst Fehr; David Huffman; Nick Netzer
Trust affects almost all human relationships ? in families, organizations,
markets and politics. However, identifying the conditions under which trust,
defined as people's beliefs in the trustworthiness of others, has a causal
effect on the efficiency of human interactions has proven to be difficult.
We show experimentally and theoretically that trust indeed has a causal
effect. The duration of the effect depends, however, on whether initial
trust variations are supported by multiple equilibria. We study a repeated
principal-agent game with multiple equilibria and document empirically that
an efficient equilibrium is selected if principals believe that agents are
trustworthy, while players coordinate on an inefficient equilibrium if
principals believe that agents are untrustworthy. Yet, if we change the
institutional environment such that there is a unique equilibrium, initial
variations in trust have short-run effects only. Moreover, if we weaken
contract enforcement in the latter environment, exogenous variations in
trust do not even have a short-run effect. The institutional environment
thus appears to be key for whether trust has causal effects and whether the
effects are transient or persistent.
JEL: C91 D02 D91 E02
Keywords: Trust, causality, equilibrium selection, belief distortions,
incomplete contracts, screening, institutions
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zur:econwp:304&r=soc
2. Connecting to Power: Political Connections, Innovation, and Firm Dynamics -
Ufuk Akcigit; Salom? Baslandze; Francesca Lotti
Do political connections affect firm dynamics, innovation, and creative
destruction? We study Italian firms and their workers to answer this
question. Our analysis uses a brand-new dataset, spanning the period from
1993 to 2014, where we merge: (i) firm-level balance sheet data; (ii) social
security data on the universe of workers; (iii) patent data from the
European Patent Office; (iv) the national registry of local politicians; and
(v) detailed data on local elections in Italy. We find that firm-level
political connections are widespread, especially among large firms, and that
industries with a larger share of politically connected firms feature worse
firm dynamics. We identify a leadership paradox: When compared to their
competitors, market leaders are much more likely to be politically
connected, but much less likely to innovate. In addition, political
connections relate to a higher rate of survival, as well as growth in
employment and revenue, but not in productivity ? a result that we also
confirm using a regression discontinuity design. We build a firm dynamics
model, where we allow firms to invest in innovation and/or political
connection to advance their productivity and to overcome certain market
frictions. Our model highlights a new interaction between static gains and
dynamic losses from rent-seeking in aggregate productivity.
JEL: D70 O3 O4
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:25136&r=soc
3. Religion, division of labor and conflict: Anti-semitism in Germany over
600 years - Sascha O. Becker; Luigi Pascali
We study the role of economic incentives in shaping the co-existence of
Jews, Catholics and Protestants, using novel data from Germany for 1,000+
cities. The Catholic usury ban and higher literacy rates gave Jews a
specific advantage in the moneylending sector. Following the Protestant
Reformation (1517), the Jews lost these advantages in regions that became
Protestant. We show 1) a change in the geography of anti-Semitism with
persecutions of Jews and anti-Jewish publications becoming more common in
Protestant areas relative to Catholic areas; 2) a more pronounced change in
cities where Jews had already established themselves as moneylenders. These
findings are consistent with the interpretation that, following the
Protestant Reformation, Jews living in Protestant regions were exposed to
competition with the Christian majority, especially in moneylending, leading
to an increase in anti-Semitism.
JEL: Z12 O18 N33 N93 D73
Keywords: Anti-semitism, religion, conflict, division of labor
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:upf:upfgen:1619&r=soc
4. Social capital at venture capital firms and their financial performance:
Evidence from China - Qi-lin Cao; Hua-yun Xiang; You-jia Mao; Ben-zhang Yang
This paper studies the extent to which social capital drives performance in
the Chinese venture capital market and explores the trend toward VC
syndication in China. First, we propose a hybrid model based on syndicated
social networks and the latent-variable model, which describes the social
capital at venture capital firms and builds relationships between social
capital and performance at VC firms. Then, we build three hypotheses about
the relationships and test the hypotheses using our proposed model. Some
numerical simulations are given to support the test results. Finally, we
show that the correlations between social capital and financial performance
at venture capital firms are weak in China and find that China's venture
capital firms lack mature social capital links.
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:arx:papers:1810.02952&r=soc
5. Knowing Me, Knowing You? Similarity to the CEO and Fund Managers'
Investment Decisions - Jaspersen, Stefan; Limbach, Peter
This study provides evidence that investors? demographic similarity to CEOs
affects their investment decisions. We find that mutual fund managers
overweight firms led by CEOs who resemble them in terms of age, ethnicity
and gender. This finding is robust to excluding educational and local ties
and is supported by variation in similarity caused by CEO departures.
Investing in firms run by similar CEOs, on average, is associated with
superior performance and is more pronounced when CEOs have more impact on
their firms. Results suggest that demographic similarity to CEOs facilitates
informed trading, implying that investors? information production
incorporates firm management.
JEL: G11 G23 J10
Keywords: CEO-investor similarity,familiarity bias,information
advantages,investment decisions,mutual fund performance
Date: 2018
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:vfsc18:181501&r=soc
6. Prosociality, Political Identity, and Redistribution of Earned Income:
Theory and Evidence - Sanjit Dhami; Emma Manifold; Ali al-Nowaihi
We explore the relation between social political identity and prosociality.
We first construct a theoretical model to generate predictions for the
behavior of players in an ultimatum game who are influenced by social
political identity. Then we use a novel subject pool-registered members of
British political parties - to play the ultimatum game, and test our
predictions. Incomes can either be unearned and untaxed (Treatment 1) or
earned, taxed, and redistributed (Treatment 2). We find that the choices of
the proposers and the responders are consistent with social identity theory
(higher offers and lower minimum acceptable offers to ingroup members)
although proposers show quantitatively stronger social identity effects.
Moving from Treatment 1 to Treatment 2, offers by proposers decline and the
minimum acceptable offers by responders (both as a proportion of income)
also decline by almost the same amount, suggesting shared understanding that
is characteristic of social norms.
JEL: D01 D03
Keywords: social identity, prosocial behavior, ultimatum game, fiscal
redistribution, entitlements
Date: 2018
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_7256&r=soc
7. Reasons for unmet needs for health care: the role of social capital
and social support in some Western EU countries - Fiorillo, D.;
This paper focuses on the demand side factors that determine access to
health care and analyses the issues of unmet needs for health care and the
reasons thereof in western EU countries. A probit model is estimated from a
sample of the whole population, accounting for the possibility of individual
selection in unmet needs for health care (UN) (selection equation). Expanded
probit models (including the inverse Mills ratio) are then used on the
reasons for unmet needs (RUN) with social capital and social support as
determinants and using the European Union Statistics on Income and Living
Conditions (EU-SILC) dataset carried out in 2006. In RUN equations, the
findings show that females, large households, people with low income and
financial constraints, the unemployed and those in poor health have a higher
probability of declaring unmet needs due to economic costs. Additionally,
people in tertiary education, those with high income and the employed have a
higher probability of not visiting a doctor when needed due to time
availability. Furthermore, the frequency of contact with friends and the
ability to ask for help are correlated with a lower probability of unmet
needs due to economic costs, while the frequency of contact with relatives
is related with a lower probability of unmet needs due to time availability
and distance. However, the ability to ask for help is also correlated with a
higher probability of not having medical care due to time availability and
the wait-and-see-approach.
JEL: C35 I12 I18 Z1
Keywords: unmet needs for healthcare; reasons for unmet needs; social
capital; social support; EU Western countries; EU-SILC data; Heckman
selection model;
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:yor:hectdg:18/29&r=soc
8. Where to look for the morals in markets? Matthias Sutter; Juergen Huber;
Michael Kirchler; Matthias Stefan; Markus Walzl
There is a heated debate on whether markets erode social responsibility and
moral behavior. However, it is a challenging task to identify and measure
moral behavior in markets. Based on a theoretical model, we examine in an
experiment the relation between trading volume, prices and moral behavior by
setting up markets that either impose a negative externality on third
parties or not. We find that moral behavior reveals itself in lower trading
volume in markets with an externality, and in prices depending on the market
structure. We further investigate individual characteristics that explain
trading behavior in markets with externalities.
JEL: C92 D03 D62
Keywords: Morals, Markets, Competition, Experiment
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:inn:wpaper:2018-18&r=soc
9. Ctrl+C Ctrl+pay: Do people mirror payment behaviour of their peers?
Carin van der Cruijsen; Joris Knoben
For stakeholders in the payment system seeking to influence the usage of
specific payment instruments, it is important to know what drives consumers'
choice of payment instrument. However, little is known about how the social
environment influences payment behaviour. This study fills this gap by
researching the relevance of peer effects for payment behaviour. We used the
detailed payment diary data of Dutch consumers. Our findings show that
payment behaviour is strongly influenced by the environment that people live
in, especially when the environment is characterised by strong social
cohesion. Hence, our study offers new insights into the diffusion of payment
behaviour.
JEL: A14 D12 D14 E42 E58 Z13
Keywords: payment diaries; payment behaviour; peer effects; consumer survey
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:dnb:dnbwpp:611&r=soc
10. Gender Norms and Intimate Partner Violence
Libertad Gonz?lez; N?ria Rodr?guez-Planas
We study the effect of social gender norms on the incidence of domestic
violence. We use data for 28 European countries from the 2012 European
survey on violence against women, and focus on first and second generation
immigrant women. We find that, after controlling for country of residence
fixed effects, as well as demographic characteristics and other
source-country variables, higher gender equality in the country of ancestry
is significantly associated with a lower risk of victimization in the host
country. This suggests that gender norms may play an important role in
explaining the incidence of intimate partner violence.
JEL: I1 J6 D1
Keywords: domestic violence, gender, Social Norms, immigrants,
epidemiological approach
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bge:wpaper:1061&r=soc
11. Social Image or Social Norm?: Re-examining the Audience Effect in
Dictator Game Experiments - Chulyoung Kim (Yonsei University);
Sang-Hyun Kim (Yonsei University)
Andreoni and Bernheim (2009) considers a variant of the dictator game in
which an exogenous force, called "nature", overturns the dictator's decision
with some known probability. They find that as the likelihood of nature's
intervention increased, more subjects mimicked the nature's move. We
replicate their experiment, and examine a new treatment in which the
dictator's decision is revealed to the recipient even when the dictator
mimics nature's move. We find that (i) many dictators' decisions were
affected by nature's intervention even when their choice was observed by the
recipient, which suggests that the intervention altered not only the
incentive to signal one's fair-mindedness but also the perception of
appropriate action, but (ii) still dictators' behavior under the two
treatments differed significantly, which suggests that the audience effect
also matters greatly in AB's and our experiments.
Keywords: Social image, Social norm, Dictator game, Altruism
Date: 2018?10
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:yon:wpaper:2018rwp-134&r=soc
12. Trust in Leadership and Affective Commitment as a Mediator between
Servant Leadership Behavior and Extra-Role Behavior of Teachers
Titik Rosnani (Universitas Tanjungpura Pontianak, West Kalimantan,
Indonesia Author-2-Name: Author-2-Workplace-Name: Author-3-Name:
Author-3-Workplace-Name: Author-4-Name: Author-4-Workplace-Name:
Author-5-Name: Author-5-Workplace-Name: Author-6-Name:
Author-6-Workplace-Name: Author-7-Name: Author-7-Workplace-Name:
Author-8-Name: Author-8-Workplace-Name:)
Objective - The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship
between trust in the leader and affective commitment as a mediator between
servant leadership behavior and extra-role behavior. In addition, the study
examines, whether person-organization fit has a moderating effect.
Methodology/Technique - In total, 250 teachers of the border area responded
to the research questionnaires, which were then analyzed using structural
equation modeling with a partial least squares approach. Findings - The
outputs of this study indicate an indirect influence between the principal
servant leadership behaviors and extra-role behaviors among teachers, which
was mediated by trust in the principal and the teacher's affective
commitment to the principal. Furthermore, the results show a significant and
direct relationship between servant leadership behaviors towards trust in
the principal, affective commitment, and extra-role behaviors. Trust in the
principal and teacher's affective commitment also had a significant and
direct effect on extra-role behavior. However, the person-organization fit
which moderates the effect of servant leadership behaviors on extra-role
behaviors did not have a significant or direct effect on extra-role
behaviors, in fact, it actually weakened the influence of servant leadership
behaviors on extra-role behaviors. Novelty - The findings of this study
suggest that trust in the principal and teacher's affective commitment has
an important moderating effect which must be managed to strengthen the
relationship between servant leadership behaviors and extra-role behaviors.
JEL: M10 M11 M19
Keywords: Affective Commitment; Extra-role Behavior; Person- organization
Fit; Servant Leadership Behavior; Trust in Leader.
Date: 2018?09?27
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:gtr:gatrjs:jmmr192&r=soc
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