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Measuring Social Capital. Michael J. Gilligan, New York University . Social Capital: Definitions. “institutions , relationships, attitudes, and values that govern interactions among people and contribute to economic and social development” ( Grootvaert and Bastelaer , 2002).
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Measuring Social Capital Michael J. Gilligan, New York University
Social Capital: Definitions • “institutions, relationships, attitudes, and values that govern interactions among people and contribute to economic and social development” (Grootvaert and Bastelaer, 2002). • They divide social capital into three categories: • “Structural” membership in associations and networks • “Cognitive” trust and adherence to norms • “Collective action” • We are mainly interested in three behaviors/attitudes: • Trust • Trustworthiness • Obligation, i.e. willingness to contribute to joint community endeavors
Implications for Conflict Prevention and Development • Trust: crucial for cost-effective self enforcement of contracts and peace agreements • Obligation: Compliance with social norms: non-violence, compromise, fairness • Obligation: contributions to public goods • Obligation: Respect for legitimate sources of authority
A Few Findings (among many) • Putnam (1993) shows that local governments in Italy are more efficient where there is greater civic engagement. • Knack and Keefer (1997) demonstrate that increases in country-level trust lead to large increases in the country’s economic growth. • La Porta et. al. (1997) establish a strong positive link between trust and judicial efficiency and a strong negative link between trust and corruption.
Implications • Because social capital is linked to development and post conflict peace the World Bank and other international actors have many programs to foster the growth of social capital • Community-based DDR • Community-driven development programs • A focus on local capacity in peacekeeping efforts • “Local ownership” of development and peacebuilding programs
Measuring Social Capital • These are very difficult concepts to measure • In many cases they are not observed directly • Indicators differ greatly across different cultures • Three sorts of measures can be employed” • Observational • Survey • Behavioral
Familiarization • Community Tours • Interviews with local leaders • Focus groups • Including locals on the team is crucial
Community Observation • Focus group discussion • Crime reports • School attendance • Upkeep of public spaces • Use of public space • Participation at public events—very context dependent, so be careful!
Surveys • Collective Action • Community clean-ups, road building, church raising etc. • Cooperatives: financial, child care, agricultural, fishing, etc. • Peaceful political activities, for example lobbying of central government
Surveys • Community associations • List of those that are active • Activities • Membership: both individual level and total
Surveys • Attitudinal questions • Is this a good place to raise children? • I am proud of my community • Local community leaders are honest/indifferent/corrupt • And many others
Behavioral activities • Community observation and surveys can fail to uncover true individual social attitudes. • Behavioral group activities can be better measures because they isolate and incentivize the precise attitudes and behavior we need to measure. • These are referred to as “games” in the academic literature, but that name understates their seriousness as an effective tool for measuring social capital
Behavioral games • Four important games are: • Risk game • Altruism game • Trust game • Public goods game • Our main interest is in trust and public goods games, but we also need to conduct risk and altruism games to control for risk attitudes and altruism
Lottery • Measures subjects’ attitudes toward risk • It is important to control for this attitude because behavior that appears to be trust may really be risk acceptance
Nepal Lottery Choices Lottery Freq. Percent Cum. ------------+----------------------------------- 1 | 50 39.06 39.06 2 | 28 21.88 60.94 3 | 21 16.41 77.34 4 | 12 9.38 86.72 5 | 17 13.28 100.00 ------------+----------------------------------- Total | 128 100.00
Altruism Game • Subjects were given a sum of money • In Nepal 40 NPR in 5 NPR notes • Subjects are asked how much they wanted to contribute to a local needy family • The identity of the family is not revealed
Trust Game • Subjects are randomly assigned to one of two roles: sender or receiver • Both types are given initial endowment of money • Senders decide how much of their endowment to send to the receiver • We triple that amount and give it to the receiver • The receiver decides how much of this total to return to the sender • All players and types are anonymous • Nash: send zero, return zero • Social optimum: send full endowment, return whatever
Trust • Different than “trustworthiness” (Glaeser et. al) • Confounded with risk aversion (Schechter 2006) • Confounded by feelings of altruism and fairness (Cox 2002) • Confounded with patience (de Oliviera et. al 2010)
Public Goods Game • All subjects play simultaneously • Each player is given two cards, one with an “X” and one blank • For each “X” card turned in in the first round all players receive an amount of money, say 4NPR • Turning in an “X” card in the second round earns the player that turned it in a larger amount, say 20 NPR • Nash: keep “X” card • Social optimum: everyone turns in “X” card
Example from Nepal:Does exposure to Conflict Affect Social Capital? • Victimization may lead to lack of trust • Difficult circumstances may force communities to work together • If the former a vicious cycle could result • An answer is important for transitional programming. • Blattman (2009) and Voors et. al. (2009) using different measures have found a positive link between conflict exposure and social capital
Effect of Conflict on Trust Variable | Coef. Std. Err. T-stat ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Dictator sent .1457 .029 5.09 Log income -.532 .213 -2.49 Log Family Mem. .619 .465 1.33 Conflict area 1.257 .722 1.74 Constant 7.297 2.738 2.67 N = 93 Standard error are clustered on village
Effect of Conflict onTrustworthiness Variable Coef. Std. Err. T-stat ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Sender sent 1.053 .246 4.28 Log income -.0187 .213 -0.09 Log Family Mem. 1.674 1.979 0.85 Dictator sent .254 .0749 3.39 Conflict Area 1.172 1.095 1.07 Constant -5.216 3.863 -1.35 N = 88 Standard errors clustered on village
Public goods and Conflict Variable Coef. Std. Err. Z-stat -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Log income 0.185 0.102 1.82 Log Family Mem. -0.471 0.186 -2.53 Conflict Area -0.527 0.270 -1.95 Constant -1.673 1.125 -1.49 N = 178 Standard errors clustered on village
Summary of findings • Conflict is associated with… (1) A greater willingness to provide public goods (2) Higher levels of trust (3) But not higher levels of trustworthiness.
Conclusion • Social capital is an important component of post-conflict stability and economic development • Many development programs are designed to foster the growth social capital • The extent to which these programs accomplish this goal is an important evaluative criterion of these programs • Social capital is measurable by observational survey and behavioral measures