New Economics Papers - Social Norms and Social Capital - 29-09-2014
In this issue we feature 11 current papers on the theme of social capital:
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In this issue we have:
- Public goods and ethnic diversity: evidence from deforestation in Indonesia - Alberto Alesina; Caterina Gennaioli; Stefania Lovo
- The Determinants and Consequences of Friendship Composition - Jason Fletcher; Stephen Ross; Yuxiu Zhang;
- Time for Helping - Anastasia Danilov; Timo Vogelsang
- Coordination in Public Good Provision: How Individual Volunteering is Impacted by the Volunteering of Others - Diasakos, Theodoros M; Neymotin, Florence
- Natural Land Productivity, Cooperation and Comparative Development - Anastasia Litina
- Competition and Social Identity in the Workplace: Evidence from a Chinese Textile Firm - Takao Kato; Pian Shu
- Using Corporate Social Networks: exploring the role of satisfaction - Nabila JAWADI; Mohamed DAASSI; Laetitia BONIS
- Continuous Homophily and Clustering in Random Networks - Florian Gauer; Jakob Landwehr
- Agricultural landscape as a driver of regional competitiveness - The role of stakeholder networks in landscape valorisation - Schaller, Lena; Ehmeier, V; Kapfer, M; Kantelhardt, J
- Social Distance, Reputation, Risk Attitude, Value Orientation and Equity in Economic Exchanges - Mohamed I. Gomaa; Stuart Mestelman; Mohamed Shehata
- Institutions And The Preservation Of Cultural Traits - Prummer, Anja; Siedlarek, Jan-Peter
Contents.
- Public goods and ethnic diversity: evidence from deforestation in Indonesia
- The Determinants and Consequences of Friendship Composition
Date: |
2014-09 |
By: |
Jason Fletcher (University of Wisconsin) |
URL: |
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This paper examines the demographic pattern of friendship links among youth and the impact of those patterns on own educational outcomes using the friendship network data in the Add Health. We develop and estimate a reduced form matching model to predict friendship link formation and identify the parameters based on across-cohort, within school variation in the "supply" of potential friends. We find novel evidence showing that small increases in the share of students with college educated mothers raises the likelihood of friendship links among students with high maternal education, and that small increases in the share of minority students increases the level of racial homophily in friendship patterns. We then use the predicted friendship links from the matching model in an instrumental variable analysis, and find positive effects of friends' high socioeconomic status, as measured by parental education, on own GPA outcomes among girls. The GPA effects are likely driven by science and English grades, and through non-cognitive factors. |
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Keywords: |
Friendship Formation; Grades; Cohort Study; Peer Effects; Non-Cognitive Effects |
JEL: |
- Time for Helping
Date: |
2014-08-26 |
By: |
Anastasia Danilov (University of Cologne) |
URL: |
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This study investigates whether individuals engage in prosocial behavior when it requires their time but not money. In a lab experiment with rigorous anonymity arrangements, subjects receive their payoff beforehand and can engage in a tedious task to increase the earnings of a passive recipient. We find that individuals work for a significant amount of time. |
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Keywords: |
Laboratory experiment, social preferences, time, opportunity costs, volunteering, altruism |
JEL: |
- Coordination in Public Good Provision: How Individual Volunteering is Impacted by the Volunteering of Others
Date: |
2013 |
By: |
Diasakos, Theodoros M |
URL: |
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In this analysis, we examine the relationship between an individual's decision to volunteer and the average level of volunteering in the community where the individual resides. Our theoretical model is based on a coordination game , in which volunteering by others is informative regarding the benefit from volunteering. We demonstrate that the interaction between this information and one's private information makes it more likely that he or she will volunteer, given a higher level of contributions by his or her peers. We complement this theoretical work with an empirical analysis using Census 2000 Summary File 3 and Current Population Survey (CPS) 2004-2007 September supplement file data. We control for various individual and community characteristics, and employ robustness checks to verify the results of the baseline analysis. We additionally use an innovative instrumental variables strategy to account for reflection bias and endogeneity caused by selective sorting by individuals into neighborhoods, which allows us to argue for a causal interpretation. The empirical results in the baseline, as well as all robustness analyses, verify the main result of our theoretical model, and we employ a more general structure to further strengthen our results. |
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Keywords: |
- Natural Land Productivity, Cooperation and Comparative Development
Date: |
2014 |
By: |
Anastasia Litina (CREA, Université de Luxembourg) |
URL: |
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This research advances the hypothesis that natural land productivity in the past, and its effect on the desirable level of cooperation in the agricultural sector, had a persistent effect on the evolution of social capital, the process of industrialization and comparative economic development across the globe. Exploiting exogenous sources of variations in land productivity across a) countries; b) individuals within a country, and c) migrants of different ancestry within a country, the research establishes that lower level of land productivity in the past is associated with more intense coope- ration and higher levels of contemporary social capital and development, |
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Keywords: |
Land productivity, Cooperation, Social Capital, trust, Growth, development, Agriculture, Industrialisation |
JEL: |
- Competition and Social Identity in the Workplace: Evidence from a Chinese Textile Firm
- Using Corporate Social Networks: exploring the role of satisfaction
- Continuous Homophily and Clustering in Random Networks
Date: |
2014-07 |
By: |
Florian Gauer (Center for Mathematical Economics, Bielefeld University) |
URL: |
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We propose a random network model incorporating heterogeneity of agents and a continuous notion of homophily. Unlike the vast majority of the corresponding economic literature, we capture homophily in terms of similarity rather than equality of agents. We show that if links between similar agents are indeed more likely, our homophilous random network model exhibits clustering. Moreover, simulations indicate that the well-known small-world phenomenon is preserved even at high homophily levels. As a possible application we provide a stylized labor market model, where a firm can hire a worker via the social network. |
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Keywords: |
Random Graphs, Homophily, Clustering, Small-World Phenomenon, Network Formation, Labor Market Search |
JEL: |
- Agricultural landscape as a driver of regional competitiveness - The role of stakeholder networks in landscape valorisation
- Social Distance, Reputation, Risk Attitude, Value Orientation and Equity in Economic Exchanges
- Institutions And The Preservation Of Cultural Traits
Date: |
2014-08-04 |
By: |
Prummer, Anja |
URL: |
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We offer a novel explanation for why some immigrant groups and minorities have persistent, distinctive cultural traits – the presence of a rigid institution. Such an institution is necessary for communities to not fully assimilate to the mainstream society. We distinguish between different types of institutions, such as churches, foreign-language media or ethnic business associations and ask what level of cultural distinction these institutions prefer. Any type of institution can have incentives to be extreme and select maximal cultural distinction from the mainstream society. If institutions choose positive cultural distinction, without being extremist, then a decrease in discrimination leads to reduced assimilation. |
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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