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Is Social Capital a Factor?. Keming Yang Department of Sociology University of Reading United Kingdom Email: k.yang@reading.ac.uk QMSS Conference Prague, June 2007. Overview. Tackling social capital’s multi-dimensionality: contrasting the factor approach and the index approach;
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Is Social Capital a Factor? Keming Yang Department of Sociology University of Reading United Kingdom Email: k.yang@reading.ac.uk QMSS Conference Prague, June 2007
Overview • Tackling social capital’s multi-dimensionality: contrasting the factor approach and the index approach; • Confirmatory factor analysis; • An index of social capital; • The distribution of index scores across European countries; • Discussions.
Social Capital: Two Issues • Individual or aggregate? Dealt with in another paper; • Multiple dimensions: trust, social networks, civic engagement, etc. • Question: How should we deal with the multi-dimensionality in statistical analysis? Factor, or index?
Multidimensionality and Quantification Putnam: social capital ‘is stubbornly resistant to quantification’ because ‘social capital is multidimensional, and some of those dimensions themselves are subject to different understandings’ (2002: 11-12). But, in his books, there are many indices, statistics, and graphs.
Clarifications • Statistics (quantification) are allowed, but on proxy measures, not directly on social capital. • Each proxy indicator is quantifiable, but it does not make sense to sum them up (oranges and apples).
Explication • Social capital is not directly measurable but can be assessed and inferred via the measurement of its observable proxies social capital is a factor (latent construct). • Dimensions of social capital are qualitatively different and therefore not subject to mathematical operation it is not legitimate to create any index for social capital.
Demands for Index • Practical: governments, international organizations, charities, etc., need a simple measure of social capital to see the effects of policies and programmes; • Theoretical: the amount of social capital: how much does an individual (community, nation, etc.) have?
The Factor Approach:The One-Factor Confirmatory Model Social Capital V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9 e1 e1 e1 e1 e1 e1 e1 e1 e1
The Factor Approach:A Second-Order Confirmatory Model Social Capital Trust Civic Orgs Networks V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9 e1 e2 e3 e4 e5 e6 e7 e8 e9
The Index Model Social Capital V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9 Kenneth Bollen: ‘cause indicators’ vs. ‘effect indicators’ (Babbie, 2007: 158)
Data and Variables • Data: ESS (round1, 2002) • Variables: • Trust • People trusted? (11 point scale) • People fair? (11 point scale) • People helpful? (11 point scale) • Social network • Being social (7 point scale) • Relative social participation (5 point scale) • Importance of friends in life (11 point scale) • Civic engagement • Index of level of engagement in interest-based voluntary organizations (transformed into 11 point scale) • Index of level of engagement in influence-based voluntary organizations (transformed into 11 point scale) • Importance of VO in life (11 point scale) • Importance of being active in VO for a good citizen
Polychoric Correlation Matrix(Total effective n=36589) Trust Fair Help Social Activity Friends ImpVO VOCtzn IntrstVO InflVO 1.000 0.595 1.000 0.488 0.517 1.000 0.135 0.137 0.117 1.000 0.146 0.128 0.107 0.357 1.000 0.129 0.154 0.152 0.247 0.215 1.000 0.062 0.042 0.048 0.102 0.175 0.206 1.000 0.050 0.035 0.036 0.073 0.126 0.180 0.565 1.000 0.2360.212 0.196 0.2150.313 0.131 0.273 0.190 1.000 0.246 0.202 0.180 0.122 0.210 0.076 0.163 0.123 0.514 1.000
One-Factor: All countries Chi-square=40365.76 (df=35); P<0.00001; RMSEA = 0.177
One-Factor Model: Austria Chi-square=3449.38 (df=35); P<0.00001; RMSEA = 0.215
The Second-Order Model: Results by country Note: Czech and Switzerland VO information missing; df=32.
From Factor to Index • Neither the one-factor model nor the second-order model fits the data; • Three forms of social capital are weakly correlated (not reported here); • No evidence supports the existence of social capital as a latent construct; an umbrella abstraction; • Creating an index by treating observed variables as cause indicators rather than effect indicators.
Rationales of Making an Index of Social Capital • It may not make sense to add apples and oranges, but it does make sense to measure fruit intake. • ‘Individual social capital’ lends conceptual support. • Allow analysis of the distribution of social capital across individuals, communities and nations. • Governments and organizations need a simple and cumulative index.
A Simple Cumulative Index Sum of weighted (w) total of each respondent’s scores of i components (c). • Ad hoc due to the lack of commonly accepted theories; for this study, items in ESS (i=10); • No weights applied except for level of engagement in voluntary organizations; • Scales with more points more likely to have higher scores, so all scores with fewer points (‘meet socially’ (7) and ‘social activities’ (5)) are transformed into a scale of ten. • Range: 0.34 to 100.
Observations • Overall and on average, people in Northern Europe have higher level of social capital, followed by the West, the South and the East; • Northern Europe also has the smallest variation of social capital; • Van Oorschot, Arts and Gelissen (2006) found a similar pattern without making an index; • Ignore specific components; • Reliability of the index needs to be established, perhaps by accuracy of prediction.
What’s Next? • Consensus on the components and their corresponding weights in the composite index of individual social capital; • Theories and empirical research for explaining the level of social capital at the individual level; • Relative distribution analysis of social capital index across groups;