nep-soc New Economics Papers
on Social Norms and Social Capital
Issue of 2009‒11‒07
nine papers chosen by
Fabio Sabatini
University of Siena

  1. Will growth and technology destroy social interaction? The inverted U-shape hypothesis By Antoci, Angelo; Sabatini, Fabio; Sodini, Mauro
  2. Social capital and economic growth in Polish regions By Dzialek, Jaroslaw
  3. Microfoundations of Social Capital By Christian Thöni; Jean-Robert Tyran; Erik Wengström
  4. Do as the Neighbors Do: The Impact of Social Networks on Immigrant Employees By Fredrik Anderson; Simon Burgess; Julia Lane
  5. Social capital and knowledge in interorganizational networks: Their joint effect on innovation By Ana Pérez-Luño; Carmen Cabello Medina; Antonio Carmona Lavado; Gloria Cuevas Rodríguez
  6. Religion, Clubs, and Emergent Social Divides By Michael D. Makowsky
  7. Relational Good at Work! Crime and Sport Participation in Italy. Evidence from Panel Data Regional Analysis over the Period 1997-2003. By Raul Caruso
  8. Procedural Rationality and Happiness By Novarese, Marco; Castellani, Marco; Di Giovinazzo, Viviana
  9. Strategies in Social Network Formation By Anna Conte; Daniela Di Cagno; Emanuela Sciubba

  1. By: Antoci, Angelo; Sabatini, Fabio; Sodini, Mauro
    Abstract: This paper addresses two hot topics of the contemporary debate, social capital and economic growth. Our theoretical analysis sheds light on decisive but so far neglected issues: how does social capital accumulate over time? Which is the relationship between social capital, technical progress and economic growth in the long run? The analysis shows that the economy may be attracted by alternative steady states, depending on the initial social capital endowments and cultural exogenous parameters representing the relevance of social interaction and trust in well-being and production. When material consumption and relational goods are substitutable, the choice to devote more and more time to private activities may lead the economy to a “social poverty trap”, where the cooling of human relations causes a progressive destruction of the entire stock of social capital. In this case, the relationship of social capital with technical progress is described by an inverted U-shaped curve. However, the possibility exists for the economy to follow a virtuous trajectory where the stock of social capital endogenously and unboundedly grows. Such result may follow from a range of particular conditions, under which the economy behaves as if there was no substitutability between relational activities and material consumption.
    Keywords: Social capital; relational goods; happyness; economic growth.
    JEL: Z13 O4
    Date: 2009
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:18229&r=soc
  2. By: Dzialek, Jaroslaw
    Abstract: There is an ongoing debate on social capital resources in Poland, where the density of associational activities and the level of social trust is low when compared to West European countries. Moreover, some researchers claim that Polish economy is developing despite low resources of social capital. This paper examines spatial patterns of various forms of social capital (networks and trust; bonding and bridging social capital; family, friendship, neighbourhood and associational ties) in Poland and determinants of their distribution. It analyses relations between resources of social capital and regional growth.
    Keywords: social capital; regional growth; Poland
    JEL: O18 O43 Z13
    Date: 2009
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:18287&r=soc
  3. By: Christian Thöni (University of St. Gallen); Jean-Robert Tyran (Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen); Erik Wengström (Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen)
    Abstract: We show that the standard trust question routinely used in social capital research is importantly related to cooperation behavior and we provide a microfoundation for this relation. We run a large-scale public goods experiment over the internet in Denmark and find that the trust question is a proxy for cooperation preferences rather than beliefs about others’ cooperation. To disentangle the preference and belief channels, we run a (standard) public goods game in which beliefs matter for cooperation choices and one (using the strategy method) in which they do not matter. We show that the “fairness question”, a recently proposed alternative to the “trust question”, is also related to cooperation behavior but operates through beliefs rather than preferences.
    Keywords: Social capital; Trust; Fairness; Public goods; Cooperation; Experiment
    JEL: H41 C91 C72
    Date: 2009–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:kud:kuiedp:0924&r=soc
  4. By: Fredrik Anderson; Simon Burgess; Julia Lane
    Abstract: Substantial immigrant segregation in the United States, combined with the increase in the share of the U.S. foreign-born population, have led to great interest in the causes and consequences of immigrant concentration, including those related to the functioning of labor markets. This paper provides robust evidence that both the size and the quality of an immigrant enclave affects the labor market outcomes of new immigrants. We develop new measures of the quality, or information value, of immigrant networks by exploiting data based on worker earnings records matched to firm and Census information. We demonstrate the importance of immigrant employment links: network members are much more likely than other immigrants to be employed in the same firm as their geographic neighbors. Immigrants living with large numbers of employed neighbors are more likely to have jobs than immigrants in areas with fewer employed neighbors. The effects are quantitatively important and robust under alternative specifications. For example, in a high value network – one with an average employment rate in the 90th percentile – a one standard deviation increase in the log of the number of contacts in the network is associated with almost a 5% increase in the employment rate. Earnings, conditional on employment, increase by about 0.7%.
    Keywords: Social networks, immigrant enclaves, labor market intermediaries
    JEL: J61 J20
    Date: 2009–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bri:cmpowp:09/219&r=soc
  5. By: Ana Pérez-Luño (Department of Business Administration, Universidad Pablo de Olavide); Carmen Cabello Medina (Department of Business Administration, Universidad Pablo de Olavide); Antonio Carmona Lavado (Department of Business Administration, Universidad Pablo de Olavide); Gloria Cuevas Rodríguez (Department of Business Administration, Universidad Pablo de Olavide)
    Abstract: This research analyzes the effects of interorganizational links on innovation using a comprehensive framework that integrates three research streams: social capital, knowledge based view and innovation. Using data from 143 R&D and/or marketing departments of innovative manufacturing and service companies, our results show that while knowledge complexity, per se, exerts a clear influence on the degree of innovations radicalness, the effect of knowledge tacitness appears only when it is combined with social capital. Similarly, the mere existence of strong cooperation agreements (relational social capital) does not guarantee more radical innovations. It is only when this social capital is combined with tacit knowledge that it really produces more innovative products. We also find that such radical products have an important impact on firm performance.
    Keywords: : Innovation; radicalness; social capital; knowledge complexity; knowledge tacitness; firm performance
    Date: 2009–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pab:wpbsad:09.04&r=soc
  6. By: Michael D. Makowsky (Department of Economics, Towson University)
    Abstract: Arguments for and against the existence of an American cultural divide are frequently placed in a religious context. This paper seeks to establish that, all politics aside, the American religious divide is real, that modern religious polarization is not a uniquely American phenomenon, and that religious divides can be understood as naturally emergent within the club theory of religion. Analysis of the 2005 Baylor University Religion Survey reveals a bimodal distribution of religious commitment in the United States. International survey data reveals bimodal distributions in twenty-five of twenty-nine surveyed countries. The club theory of religion, when applied in a multi-agent model, generates bimodal distributions of religious commitment whose emergence correlates to the substitutability of club goods for standard goods and the mean population wage rate. This tendency towards religious polarization has important ramifications for majority rule electoral outcomes when religion is politically salient. Majority rule, principally analogous to the statistical median, is a non-robust estimator of voter preferences when they are bimodally distributed. Given recent evidence that religiosity has come to dominate income as a determinant of voter preferences, small errors can be anticipated to disproportionately affect electoral outcomes in the U.S.
    Keywords: Culture Divide, Religious Divide, Club Theory, Multi-Agent Model, Sacrifice and Stigma
    Date: 2009–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:tow:wpaper:2009-03&r=soc
  7. By: Raul Caruso (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore di Milano)
    Abstract: What is the broad impact of sport participation and sport activities in a society? The first aim of this paper is tackling this crucial point by studying whether or not there is a relationship between sport participation and crime. A panel dataset have been constructed for the twenty Italian regions over the period 1997-2003. The impact of spot participation on different type of crimes has been studied. Results show that: (i) there is a robust negative association between sport participation and property crime; (ii) There is a robust negative association between sport participation and juvenile crime; (iii) There is a positive association between sport participation and violent crime, but it is only weakly significant.
    Keywords: Sport participation, relational goods, crime, Kenneth Boulding
    JEL: L83 D62
    Date: 2009–10–13
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:qut:auncer:2009_60&r=soc
  8. By: Novarese, Marco; Castellani, Marco; Di Giovinazzo, Viviana
    Abstract: The Economics of Happiness already recognizes how procedures affect the evaluation of outcomes, although this has only been looked at within the standard framework of substantial rationality. This paper aims to go beyond that kind of approach by linking happiness and procedural rationality, focusing on ‘happiness for choice’ (the individual’s perceived satisfaction after the decision making process). Simon’s model shows the need for defining aspirations whose values are adapted to the past experience in a given environment. Some remarks proposed by Scitovsky’s allow to extend this idea considering the role of creative representation of the world as a way for trying to go beyond the past. These ideas are tested using data on aspirations and satisfaction expressed by students attending an economic course.
    Keywords: Procedural rationality; satisfaction; students; happiness; aspirations
    JEL: D83
    Date: 2009–10–31
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:18290&r=soc
  9. By: Anna Conte; Daniela Di Cagno; Emanuela Sciubba (School of Economics, Mathematics & Statistics, Birkbeck)
    Abstract: We run a computerised experiment of network formation where all connections are beneficial and only direct links are costly. Players simultaneously submit link proposals; a connection is made only when both players involved agree. We use both simulated and experimentally generated data to test the determinants of individual behaviour in network formation. We find that approximately 40% of the network formation strategies adopted by the experimental subjects can be accounted for as best responses. We test whether subjects follow alternative patterns of behaviour and in particular if they: propose links to those from whom they have received link proposals in the previous round; propose links to those who have the largest number of direct connections. We find that together with best response behaviour, these strategies explain approximately 75% of the observed choices. We estimate individual propensities to adopt each of these strategies, controlling for group effects. Finally we estimate a mixture model to highlight the proportion of each type of decision maker in the population.
    Date: 2009–06
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bbk:bbkefp:0905&r=soc

This nep-soc issue is ©2009 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.
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