The Role of Social Capital in Financial Development
The Role of Social Capital in Financial Development
The Role of Social Capital in Financial Development
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cruing
is there an inherited component imprinted dur-to people through membership in
certain
ing education? We distinguish between thesecommunities (Pierre Bourdieu, 1986).
Coleman (1990) describes social capital as a
two interpretations by focusing on households
resource of individuals that emerges from so-
that have moved from one province to another.
cial ties. Thus, the source of this capital lies
For these households we can separately identify
the effect of the environment they grew with
upthe
in people a person is related to. But why
are some people willing to make resources
and the environment where they live. Although
most of the effect is due to the level of social available to others without any explicit
capital prevailing in the area where an individ- compensation?
ual lives, a significant fraction (roughly a third) Sociologists identify two main motivations
is due to the level of social capital prevailing in(Alejandro Portes, 1998). First, people may do
the area where he was born. it because of strongly internalized norms (what
Besides the literature on trust and social cap-sociologists call consummatory behavior). They
ital, our work is mostly related to a growing donate to charity, obey traffic rules, and pay
number of studies on the effect of social inter- their debts on time because they feel obli-
action, peer monitoring, and peer pressure on gated to do so. Alternatively, people might be
criminal behavior (Ann Case and Larry Katz, willing to make resources available for instru-
1991), on shirking in the workplace (Andrea mental reasons. In this case, social capital
Ichino and Giovanni Maggi, 2000), on group affects the behavior of individuals because it
lending programs (Timothy Besley and Stephen enhances the level of social punishment of a
Coate, 1995), and on stock market participationsociety.
(Harrison Hong et al., 2004). This literature For most of the paper we do not distinguish
studies the effect of the social structure of small between these two theories. Instead, we focus
groups on economic outcomes. Because we are on a common prediction of both, that high lev-
interested in explaining different patterns of els of social capital generate higher levels of
economic development, we instead look at so- trust toward others. At the end of the paper we
cial characteristics of the whole community try to distinguish whether social capital is
(electoral participation, the incidence of blood purely driven by environmental variables or if
donation) where individuals live and grow up. there is also an inherited component.
We investigate whether the use and availability
of financial instruments is affected by the social B. Social Capital and Financial Development
characteristics of the community.
The paper proceeds as follows. Section I dis-Whether individuals are willing to sign finan-
cusses the notion of social capital and its mea-
cial contracts depends not only on the enforce-
sures. Section II describes the data and the ability of contracts, but also on the extent to
hypotheses that we test. Section III presents the
which they trust the counterpart.
results of the effect of social capital on the Trust
use within a specific group may have am-
and availability of financial contracts. Section
biguous effects on the use of financial contracts.
IV explores situations when social capital is York, diamond traders all belong to a
In New
more important. Section V asks if there is Jewish
an orthodox sect and they do not use con-
inherited component of social capital, imprinted tracts: the within-group trust is sufficient. By
with education. Section VI assesses the relative contrast, trust across groups or generalized trust
importance of the inherited versus environmen- can only benefit the workings of organized mar-
tal component of social capital. Section VII kets and the development of finance.
concludes. Since we focus on social capital at the com-
munity level, we characterize high-social-
I. The Concept of Social Capital capital areas as those with high levels of
generalized trust, which has an unambiguously
A. What Is Social Capital? positive effect on the use and availability of
financial contracts. Thus, we expect financial
In sociology, social capital is broadly de-development to be positively correlated with
fined as the advantages and opportunities ac-our measures of social capital.
C. A Simple Framework and higher costs (k) reduce the utility from
absconding.3
To determine our choice of the right proxies Given these assumptions, there is a cost
of social capital and the empirical tests, we
threshold ki = k(XJ, NJ, Oi) below which broker
sketch a simple model of the link between social
i will find it optimal to abscond,
capital, trust, and financial decisions. We con-
struct the model in terms of a household deci-
sion of how much to invest in stock, but we note (2) a { k1 if < ki
that our model can be easily extended to other
(2) a * 0 otherwiseJ'
financial decisions.
Let investor i's demand for stock be repre- Since it can be shown that k is decreasing in
sented by X, N, and Oi, fewer brokers will abscond in areas
with high value of XJ, N', and Oi.
(1) Si= f(ER, (p) We assume for simplicity there are only two
types of agents Oi E (OL, OH), where OH > OL
where Si is the amount of money principal i denotes a type who is less willing to abscond
invests in stock, ER the expected return from with the money. The distribution of broker
the investment, and p,i her individual character- types can differ across areas. Let pJ denote the
istics, such as risk aversion, that affect portfolio frequency of 0L types in the population of
choice. To introduce an element of trust we agents living in area J. In equilibrium, the prob-
assume that the broker will abscond with the ability a broker in area J absconds is given by4
money with some probability.2 If the investor
fears that the broker will abscond with her
(3) 7J = h(p, XJ, NJ).
money, the expected return of her investment
will not simply be R, the expected return on the
stock, but rT X 0 + (1 - 7r) X R where Tr is the This equation represents the probability that
probability the broker will abscond with the an investor in area J will use to compute her
money. expected return. Then, her demand for stock in
How much an investor will trust her broker region J will be
depends on her expectation about the broker's
behavior. To derive this expectation we analyze (4) Si =f((1 - 7Tj) R, (,i)
the broker's decision.
A broker i's utility of absconding can be = I(XJ, NJ, pJ, oi ).
written as Vi = V(a,, XJ, NJ, Oi, ki) where ai E
{0, 1} is the action (abscond or not), XJ the
quality of legal enforcement in area J where the It follows, then, that the demand for stock in
investor is located, NJ the extent of social net- area J will be increasing in the level of legal
works in area J, Oi is the set of social norms ofenforcement (X), in the extent of social network
agent i, and ki an individual-specific fixed cost(N), and in the relative strength of norms (p).5
of absconding drawn from the cumulative dis-
tribution F(k), which is the same across areas. D. How Do We Measure Social Capital?
We assume that higher legal enforcement (X),
broader social networks (N), stronger norms (0), Because we do not observe individual norms,
Oi, and hence pJ, and since it is difficult to
observe all the formal and informal social net- (1987), to public order measures (1978,
works, NJ, we follow earlier studies in using 1981).
some outcome-based measures of social capital. Table 1 shows that Italy has a very high
However, to do so we must ensure that these average voter turnout (80 percent). However,
measures are not affected by other environmen- what is relevant for this study is the cross-
tal variables, such as legal enforcement, that are sectional variability, which is substantial. Turn-
uncorrelated with social capital, but which out goes from 62 percent to 92 percent, with
might have a direct impact on our variable ofone-quarter of the observations below 72 per-
interest (e.g., investment in equity), as equation cent and one-quarter above 86 percent. Figure
(4) shows. Therefore, we focus on the choice of 1 shows how this measure of social capital
electoral participation and blood donation. varies within Italy. Social capital is higher in the
Unlike economic cooperation, legal variablesNorth of Italy (north of the Apennines), weaker
and individual characteristics other than norms in the center (from the Apennines to Rome), and
do not enter in the utility of donating blood orvery weak in the South (south of Rome). How-
donating time to vote, Di. By contrast, the utilityever, even within these areas there is some
function might depend on the aggregate (com-variation.
munity) level of donation (or voting), DJ. In Italy 90 percent of the whole blood dona-
Hence, the utility from donating blood can betions and 100 percent of anonymous blood do-
represented as Ui = F(Di, DJ, NJ, Oi). nations are collected by AVIS, the Italian
In equilibrium DJ = f(NJ, pJ). Thus, the localassociation of voluntary blood donors (see the
level of blood donation (or electoral participa- Appendix for more details on AVIS). Since the
tion) is a function of only the two componentscollection procedures are set nationally and ad-
of social capital, networks and norms. If we doministered by AVIS, these data control for pos-
not want to distinguish between these twosible differences in the quality of medical
sources of social capital, DJ is a legitimateinfrastructure. Hence, our second measure of
proxy for the level of social capital in area J. social capital is the number of 16-ounce blood
Hence, we can rewrite (4) as Si = I(XJ, DJ, Spi).bags collected per inhabitant in the province in
We use this specification in our empirical 1995, the only year for which we have complete
analysis. data at the province level.
As Table 1 shows, the average level of do-
II. The Data nation is three bags per hundred people, but
there is high cross-sectional variability. Some
A. Measures of Social Capital provinces have no donations, others go as high
as 11 bags per hundred people.
As noted, our primary measures of social Table 1, Panel B, reports the cross-correlations
between these two measures of social capital.
capital are electoral turnout and blood donation.
We measure both these factors at the province Despite the different nature of these variables,
level.6 their correlation is high (0.64). However, it is
Since in general elections Italian citizens not perfect. Hence, we can gain some insights
are required to vote by the law, we measure by looking at common components.
voter turnout in referenda, where voting is not
mandatory. We measure voter turnout for all B. Measures of Use and Availability of
the referenda that occurred in Italy between Financial Instruments
1946 and 1989. These referenda cover a very
broad set of issues, ranging from the choice Our data on households is drawn from the
between republic and monarchy (1946), di- Survey of Household Income and Wealth
vorce (1974), abortion (1981), from hunting (SHIW). This survey is conducted by the Bank
regulation (1987), to the use of nuclear power of Italy on a representative sample of about
8,000 households. The survey collects detailed
information on Italian household income, con-
6 In our classification Italy is divided in 95 provinces, sumption, and wealth as well as households'
which are similar to U.S. counties. portfolio allocation across financial instruments
Panel B: Correlations
Notes: The description of the variables is in the Appendix. Panel A contains summary statistics. Pane
among the social capital indicators and other environmental variables. The number in parentheses is the
each correlation coefficient.
and their access to formal and informal credit. One of the unique features of the SHIW is its
For each household, the data also contain infor-ability to distinguish between households that
mation on characteristics of the households' did not want a loan from those households that
did not succeed in obtaining a loan because they
head, such as education, age, place of birth, and
residence. were turned down or did not apply because they
d '2
"'rllpalio in h ferenda
in Itaflan provinoes: percentlge rates (number of provnces)
8ormmm (17)
Nteo e (7)
[ 81b 88 (25)
r t72to s1 (21)
3 62t0 72 (22)
expected to be turned down. The survey alsosurvey has a rotating panel component, so 9,287
reveals the existence of informal credit (i.e.,of these observations come from reinterviewing
credit extended by friends and family). Thethe same household in a different year. In our
Appendix contains a more detailed description analysis we check the robustness of our results
of the data set, with the actual interview to eliminate these repeated observations. After
questions. excluding a few households that report negative
The SHIW is conducted every two years. consumption and/or income (17 observations),
Since the last four surveys (1989-1995) have our final sample contains 32,665 households if
maintained the same structure, we pool them, we include repeat observations, and 23,330
obtaining a sample of 32,686 observations. The households if we exclude repeat observations.
I II III IV V VI VII
Notes: The dependent variable is an indicator variable that takes a value one if the interviewed household responds positively
to the question "Did you or some other member of the household issue checks in the course of the year to settle transactions?"
For a description of all the other variables see the Appendix. All regressions include as controls family size, dummies for
whether the household head is male, married, for his/her type of job and industry, and calendar-year dummies. Columns III,
V, VI, and VII include as controls four macro-regional dummies (North East, North West, Center, and South). For all columns
except IV and VII the reported coefficients are probit estimates of the effect of a marginal change in the corresponding
regressor on the probability of using a check, computed at the sample mean of the independent variables. The coefficients
reported in column IV are from a linear probability model with fixed province effects. Column VII is estimated by IV, with
social capital 2 as the instrument. The standard errors reported in parentheses are corrected for the potential clustering of the
residual at the provincial level. The symbols ***, **, * mean that the coefficient is statistically different from zero,
respectively, at the 1-, 5-, and 10-percent level.
compute the impact of social capital for anand statistically significant effect on the proba-
individual that moves from the lowest-social- bility of using checks. Since other studies
capital province to the highest-social-capital(Knack and Keefer, 1997; Knack and Zack,
provinces. The probability of using a check2001) show that the level of social capital is
increases by 17 percentage points, about a thirdpositively correlated with economic develop-
of the sample mean. ment, the level of per capita GDP might absorb
The level of per capita GDP has a positive some of the effect of social capital. Nevertheless,
In our framework the importance of social errors are slightly bigger. All the results remain
capital on financial development is mediated theby
same.
the level of trust. An obvious way to check our
results is to see if there is a direct relation
between the level of interpersonal trust within a B. Investment in Cash
community and the use and availability of fi-
nancial instruments. We do this in column VI. We use the same specification to estimate the
To measure the level of interpersonal trust, we effects of social capital on portfolio allocation.
rely on the World Values Survey (WVS), whichThe only difference is that we use a two-limit
interviewed varying-sized samples of peopletobit model, since the dependent variable is
across 40 countries, including Italy, in 1990 andconstrained between zero and one. As before,
1999. In each of those surveys, roughly 2,000 we correct the standard errors for possible de-
individuals were asked the question "Generally pendence of observations within the same
speaking, would you say that you trust other province.9
Italians?" Panel A of Table 3 reports the estimated
The WVS is not stratified at the provinceeffects of social capital on the amount of cash
held by a household. Social capital has a nega-
level, thus several provinces are not present and
others are severely underrepresented. To ad- tive and highly statistically significant effect on
dress this problem, we pool the two surveys andthe proportion of wealth a household invests in
cash. A one-standard-deviation increase in so-
we group data at the regional level, by attribut-
ing to each family the average response in thecial capital reduces the amount of cash by 7
region where it is located (the 95 Italian prov-percentage points, a reduction of almost a third
inces are organized in 20 regions). Using thisin the average amount of cash held. Moving
measure of trust we reestimate our basic regres- from the lowest-social-capital province to the
sion.8 The effect of trust has the predicted signhighest-social-capital provinces decreases the
and is statistically significant, though the eco-percentage of wealth held in cash by 27 per-
nomic impact is roughly 30 percent lower than centage points.
the estimates we obtain by using our primary The degree of judicial inefficiency has a non-
measure of social capital. linear effect on the amount of money that
We also take our basic measure of social households retain in cash. This nonlinearity,
capital (electoral participation) and instrument
which is present in most specifications, is con-
it with the blood donation. This method allows
sistent with the role played by courts. At low
us to pool whatever is common to these two levels of inefficiency, small variations can
measures. The estimated coefficient (column VII) have a large impact on portfolio choices, but
doubles, suggesting that the effect is driven by the beyond a certain point, legal enforcement be-
common element in all these three measures. comes inframarginal. A further increase in the
We are also concerned that our sample con- degree of judicial inefficiency has very little
tains some repeated observations. Although the impact.
use of checks changes over time, the residuals The level of per capita GDP has a negative
might be correlated across observations of the effect on the amount retained in cash. This
same individual. Since the cross-sectional cor- effect, which is highly significant, also captures
relation in the residuals is confined to only a some of the relation between social capital and
subset of the observations, and among these to amount retained in cash.
pairs of observations, this correlation is unlikely All other control variables have the expected
to be a problem. But rather than speculate, we sign and most of them are statistically signifi-
reestimate (not reported) all the regressions by cant. Age and education reduce the fraction of
restricting the sample to the first observation offinancial wealth held in cash, as do income and
every household. As we expected, the standard wealth, but at a decreasing rate (the coefficient
8 In this regression we correct standard errors for possi- 9 When we use trust, we correct the standard errors for
ble clustering at the regional level. possible dependence of observations within a region.
I II III IV V VI VII
-0.8854*** -0.5007***
Social capital -0.5733*** 1 -0.4999*
(0.1582) (0.1824) (0.1755) (0.2764)
Social -0.1961*** 1-
capital
origin (0.0350)
Social capital 2 -0.6112*
(0.3544)
Trust WVS -0.2036***
(0.0720)
North -0.0506***
(0.0146)
South 0.0849**
(0.0371)
Judicial inefficiency 0.1 185*** 0.0860*** 0.0787*** 0.0833*** 0.0864*** 0.0639***
(0.0266) (0.0240) (0.0239) (0.0257) (0.0316) (0.0200)
Judicial inefficiency -0.0134*** -0.0102*** -0.0096*** -0.0095*** -0.0099 -0.0077***
squared (0.0029) (0.0027) (0.0027) (0.0029) (0.0000) (0.0022)
Per capita GDP -0.0006 -0.0003 0.0003 -0.0006 0.0006 0.0001
(0.0007) (0.0008) (0.0009) (0.0011) (0.0000) (0.0009)
Average years of -0.0220* 0.0033 0.0024 0.0037 0.0044 0.0019
education (0.0133) (0.0136) (0.0132) (0.0168) (0.0000) (0.0134)
Income -0.0081*** -0.0079*** -0.0079*** -0.0068*** -0.0078*** -0.0079 -0.0069***
(0.0009) (0.0008) (0.0009) (0.0002) (0.0009) (0.0000) (0.0007)
Income squared 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000 0.0000***
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Wealth -0.0875*** -0.0926*** -0.0972*** -0.0872*** -0.0989*** -0.0929*** -0.0940***
(0.0292) (0.0291) (0.0296) (0.0135) (0.0294) (0.0345) (0.0257)
Wealth squared 0.0083 0.0091 0.0097 0.0091*** 0.0100 0.0091 0.0099
(0.0100) (0.0099) (0.0100) (0.0029) (0.0098) (0.0110) (0.0088)
Age -0.0067*** -0.0066*** -0.0065*** -0.0053*** -0.0068*** -0.0065 -0.0053***
(0.0013) (0.0012) (0.0012) (0.0008) (0.0013) (0.0000) (0.0011)
Age squared 0.0001*** 0.0001*** 0.000l*** 0.000l*** 0.0001*** 0.0001 0.0001I' *
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Education -0.0103*** -0.0103*** -0.0103*** -0.0091*** -0.0099*** -0.0102 -0.0085***
(0.0015) (0.0015) (0.0015) (0.0005) (0.0015) (0.0000) (0.0011)
Observations 32,332 32,332 32,332 31,851 31,259 32,332 31,259
Pseudo-R 2or R2 0.200 0.204 0.204 0.260 0.204 0.204 0.241
I II III IV V VI VII
Social
1.7380***capital
0.6515 0.9106* 1 0.2303***
(0.3595) (0.5476) (0.5265) (0.0785)
Social capital 1-
0.0473***
origin (0.0129)
Social capital 2 2.5325***
(0.7879)
Trust WVS 0.4061***
(0.1505)
North 0.2267***
(0.0430)
South -0.1890*
(0.1060)
Judicial inefficiency -0.0608 0.0447 0.0707 0.0611 0.0499 0.0069
(0.0959) (0.0774) (0.0757) (0.0820) (0.0693) (0.0045)
Judicial inefficiency 0.0059 -0.0030 -0.0053 -0.0048 -0.0035 -0.0003
squared (0.0105) (0.0100) (0.0097) (0.0107) (0.0000) (0.0004)
TABLE 3 Continued.
I II III IV V VI VII
Table 4 shows that social capital hasHowever, a neg- our data set provides us with infor-
ative effect on the probability of not having mation on the presence of informal loans, i.e.,
access to credit. This effect is statistically loanssig-
extended by friends or family members
nificant at the 1-percent level. The reported not living in the same household. As discussed
coefficients in Table 4 show that a one-standard- in subsection D, we expect that informal credit
deviation increase in social capital leads to a might partially substitute for formal credit
0.47-percent decrease in the probability of being wherever the latter is unavailable. Table 5 tests
discouraged or turned down. The probability that this prediction.
an individual is shut off from the credit market We estimate a probit model in which we
decreases by 2 percentage points when he moves regress the likelihood a household has a loan
from the lowest to the highest social capital area. outstanding with friends or relatives on our
To isolate the impact of social capital from measures of social capital and the usual control
other geographical differences, we estimate the variables (income, wealth, their squares, demo-
same regression by controlling for the North and graphic characteristics, etc.). We find that
South indicators (column II) and macro-regional households that come from areas with low so-
indicators (column III). The coefficient of social cial capital are more likely to receive loans from
capital is even larger than the one obtained in friends or relatives. This result is consistent
column I, suggesting that the importance of social with Banfield's (1958) and Fukuyama's (1995)
capital goes beyond geographical differences. claims that low-social-capital societies rely
We test the robustness of our results for other more heavily on naturally high-trust relation-
measures of economic development (not re- ships such as those with friends and family.
ported) and for other measures of judicial inef- This finding is also consistent with individuals
ficiency (not reported).'1 In all cases the effect absorbing these attitudes in the early years of
remains statistically significant. their lives.
Column IV of Table 4 shows that in the linear This effect is statistically significant and
probability model, the social capital of origin economically nonnegligible: moving from the
coefficient is negative and highly statistically lowest- to the highest-social-capital province
significant. decreases the probability that an individual has
Social capital measured by blood donation loans from friends and family by 3 percentage
has a negative and statistically significant effect points, about the same order of magnitude of the
on the probability of being shut down from sample average probability.
credit (column V), after controlling for macro- Once we control for North and South, and for
regional dummies. The magnitude of the effect macro-regional dummies, the effect of social
is similar to the one we obtain when we use capital is virtually unchanged and still highly
electoral participation. Moving from the lowest- significant (column II and III). The same is true
to the highest-social-capital province decreases when we control for other measures of eco-
the probability of not having access to creditnomic by development (not reported), and for other
2 percentage points. The results are similar when measures of judicial inefficiency (not reported).
we use the WVS measure of trust (column VI), These or results are fully supported by the linear
when we instrument our basic measure of social probability model that controls for province
capital with blood donation (column VII). fixed effects (column IV). Social capital mea-
sured by blood donation has a negative and
E. Informal Credit Market statistically significant effect on the probability
of borrowing from friends and relatives (col-
Thus far, we have restricted our analysis to umn V). Moving from areas of the country with
institutional forms of investment and credit. the lowest blood donation to areas with the
highest blood donation decreases the probabil-
ity that an individual borrows from friends or
1 In addition to per capita GDP, as proxies for economic
relatives by 2 percent. The results are similar
development we have used the proportion of households
that own a dishwasher and a personal computer; as an
when we use trust (column VI), or when we
alternative measure of court inefficiency we have used instrument our basic measure of social capital
the
number of pending trials per capita in a province. with blood donation (column VII).
I II III IV V VI VII
-0.0968*** capital
Social -0.1196*** -0.1157*** 1 -0.1644
(0.0261) (0.0401) (0.0433) (0.1108)
Social capital
-0.0617*** 1-
origin (0.0207)
Social capital 2 -0.1682
(0.1195)
Trust WVS -0.0046
(0.0170)
North 0.0044
(0.0055)
South -0.0046
(0.0070)
Judicial inefficiency -0.0010 0.0018 0.0021 0.0035 0.0021 0.0021
(0.0074) (0.0074) (0.0078) (0.0077) (0.0080) (0.0091)
Judicial inefficiency 0.0001 -0.0002 -0.0002 -0.0003 -0.0001 -0.0002
squared (0.0008) (0.0008) (0.0008) (0.0008) (0.0008) (0.0011)
Per capita GDP 0.0003 0.0003 0.0002 0.0000 0.0000 0.0002
(0.0002) (0.0003) (0.0003) (0.0003) (0.0004) (0.0005)
Average years of 0.0013 -0.0002 -0.0005 -0.0008 0.0018 -0.0012
education (0.0026) (0.0027) (0.0027) (0.0034) (0.0034) (0.0044)
Income -0.0008*** -0.0008*** -0.0008*** -0.0012*** -0.0008*** -0.0008*** -0.0010***
(0.0001) ( 0.0001) (0.0001) (0.0001) (0.0001) (0.0001) (0.0002)
Income squared 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000***
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Wealth 0.0072 0.0076 0.0084 0.0181** 0.0083 0.0086 0.0156**
(0.0070) (0.0069) (0.0067) (0.0080) (0.0070) (0.0057) (0.0067)
Wealth squared -0.0012 -0.0012 -0.0014 -0.0036** -0.0014 -0.0014* -0.0033***
(0.0008) (0.0008) (0.0009) (0.0017) (0.0009) (0.0008) (0.0012)
Age 0.0003 0.0003 0.0003 -0.0026*** 0.0001 0.0003 -0.0022***
(0.0006) (0.0006) (0.0006) (0.0005) (0.0006) (0.0007) (0.0005)
Age squared - 0.0000 * * -0.0000 * * -0.0000** 0.0000 * * -0.0000* * -0.0000 * 0.0000 *
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Education -0.0001 -0.0001 -0.0001 0.0001 -0.0001 -0.0000 -0.0001
(0.0002) (0.0002) (0.0002) (0.0003) (0.0002) (0.0002) (0.0003)
Observations 32,442 32,442 32,442 31,961 31,366 32,442 31,366
Pseudo-R2 or R2 0.082 0.082 0.083 0.034 0.082 0.081 0.026
enforcement is not prompt. If it takes more A similar picture emerges if we look at the
than
three years to enforce a contract (as is the caseof social capital on access to credit (Table
effect
6, Panel
in Italy), the willingness to finance a person will B). In areas with weak law enforce-
depend even more crucially on the possibility
ment, ofthe effect of social capital on the proba-
imposing moral sanctions and/or the existence
bility of being turned down after applying for a
of moral norms in a given community. This
loan or discouraged from borrowing has the
suggests that on average, we should expect
expecteda sign, is large (in absolute terms), and
bigger effect of social capital in Italy,iswhere
statistically significant. By contrast, the effect
law enforcement is slow, than in countries
is not significant (and quantitatively very small)
like Sweden or the United States, where law
in areas with better law enforcement (Table
enforcement is more efficient. More im- 6, Panel B, last two columns).
portantly, this reasoning suggests that cross-
Consistently, we find that the effect of social
sectionally, we should expect a highercapital
effect on informal credit is not statistically
of social capital in parts of Italy where law in areas with better law enforce-
significant
enforcement is comparatively worse.ment, Thisbut that it is three times as big and sta-
tistically significant in areas with weak legal
prediction is unique to trust being the channel
enforcement.
through which social capital affects financial
variables. From a policy point of view, this result sug-
To test this predication, in Table 6 we rees-gests that countries that lack social capital
timate our basic specifications, splitting the should compensate for it with better legal en-
sample between provinces with relatively effi- forcement. However, that they should does not
cient judicial systems (judicial inefficiency be- necessarily mean that they do. In fact, countries
low the median of 3.5 years) and provinces with deficient in social capital also have weak legal
relatively inefficient judicial systems (judicial enforcement. For example, in the sample of 28
inefficiency above the median).12 countries in Knack and Keefer (1997), we find a
The first two columns of Table 6, Panel A, correlation of 0.83 between trust and judicial
present the probit estimates of the likelihood of efficiency; this is true also in our sample where
using checks. In areas with better legal enforce- our measure of social capital and judicial inef-
ment, social capital does not have a statisticallyficiency across Italian provinces are negatively
significant impact on the probability of using correlated (correlation coefficient -0.63, Table
checks. By contrast, in areas with weaker legal 1). This correlation might not be a simple coin-
enforcement the effect is three times as large cidence. Putnam (1993) and La Porta et al.
and statistically significant. The difference is (1997a) suggest that the lack of social capital
also statistically significant at the 1-percent may negatively affect the working of institu-
level. tions, thus also the quality of law enforcement.
The remaining columns of Table 6, Panel A, If this were the case, our estimates would
report the tobit estimates of the effect of social grossly underestimate the overall impact of so-
capital on the fraction of financial wealth in- cial capital.
vested in cash and stocks. The effect of social
capital on the fraction of wealth invested in B. Social Capital and Education
stock is three times as large in areas with weak
law enforcement, and this difference is statisti- The extent to which a financial transaction
cally significant at the 1-percent level. Also, for
requires trust should also depend on the level of
education of the individuals involved in the
wealth invested in cash, the impact of social
capital is lower (only two-thirds) where the
transaction. For example, we compare two in-
courts work better, albeit the difference is not
vestors, an educated one, who can read and
statistically significant. understand the fine print of a financial prospec-
tus, and an unsophisticated one, who cannot
understand most of the terms. The inability to
12 We have also tried to insert the product of social fully grasp all the details of the contract in-
volved makes it harder for the unsophisticated
capital and legal enforcement in our basic regressions, with
similar results. investor to discriminate between legitimate in-
vestments and frauds. Ceteris paribus, the un- The extreme infrequency of the phenomenon
makes it more subject to confounding effects.
sophisticated investor will require greater trust
to make the same investment. Furthermore, Foranexample, widows may retain the portfolio
investor who does not have the necessary allocation of their deceased spouses, even though
ability or information to make sophisticated they do not have the same level of education. To
financial decisions (e.g., managing his port-see whether this effect plays any role we reesti-
folio) often delegates this function to some-
mate the two regressions restricting the sample to
male household heads. The difference (not re-
body else. Facing an additional delegation
risk, the unsophisticated investor will require
ported) almost doubles, albeit its statistical signif-
more trust to part with his money. Our pre-icance is still below conventional levels.
diction is that the marginal impact of social Overall, our results suggest that social capital
capital on the use of financial contracts is
matters more for less educated people.
higher among uneducated people than among
educated people. V. Does Social Capital Have an Inherited
To test this predication, we split the sample at Component?
the median level of education of the household
head (eight years, corresponding to the end of Is trust simply an equilibrium outcome of a
junior high school).13 society where nonlegal mechanisms force peo-
Table 7 presents the results. The first two ple to behave cooperatively (e.g., Coleman,
columns report the estimates for the two sub- 1990; Spagnolo, 1999), or is there an inherited
samples of the impact of social capital on the component, imprinted with education? Our fixed-
probability of using a check. The impact of effects results already suggest the existence of an
social capital among less educated people is inherited component. Given the importance of this
eight times as big as the impact of social capital aspect we explore it in greater depth.
among highly educated people. This difference One possible objection to our fixed-effect
is statistically significant at the 1-percent level. estimates is that movers differ from nonmovers
In fact, social capital has no statistically signif- in many dimensions. We are particularly con-
icant impact among highly educated people. cerned that the social capital of origin might act
As we can see in the third and fourth col- as a proxy for some other (unobservable) indi-
umns, the impact of social capital on the pro- vidual characteristics that affect an individual's
portion of wealth invested in cash is three times level of trust. After all, movers are not randomly
distributed. As Table 8, Panel A, shows, 25
larger for low-educated households than for
highly educated households. The difference is percent of the movers move from the South to
statistically significant at the 1-percent level.the North, but only 4 percent move in the op-
Also, the proportion of wealth invested posite
in direction. Since the South of Italy is
stock (last two columns) is more sensitivepoorer,
to migration from South to North might be
social capital among less educated people. less "voluntary," than from North to South. In
However, the difference is quantitatively smallother terms, if a person is "starving," she might
decide to move even if she is very risk averse.
(only 20 percent) and is not statistically signif-
icant. This result is surprising, because we ex-By contrast, in less desperate conditions, only
the least risk-averse people will choose to
pected the effect to be stronger for equity
investments, which require much more knowl- move. If this story holds, conditional on being a
edge to be analyzed. This weak result might mover
be one is more risk averse if she moves
due to the small number of less educated fam- from the South than if she moves from the
ilies who own stock (3.6 percent versus 15North. Since the South tends to have lower
social capital, movers with a lower social cap-
percent of the well-educated families and a pop-
ulation average of 7 percent). ital of origin might be more risk averse. If we do
not fully control for individual risk aversion,
this correlation might explain our results on
13 Since for many years this was the mandatory level of
schooling, there are many people at that level, which we
portfolio holdings and possibly on use of
checks.
include in the low-education group. Hence, the higher num-
ber of observations in this subsample. Unfortunately, we do not have enough
Panel A
I II III IV V VI
Use of checks
Efficient Inefficient Efficient Inefficient Efficient Inefficient
Panel B
I II III IV
Discouraged or turned down Loans from family and friends
Efficient Inefficient Efficient Inefficient
TABLE 6-Continued.
Panel B-Continued.
I II III IV
Discouraged or turned down Loans from family and friends
Efficient Inefficient Efficient Inefficient
Age 0.0000
0.0005 -0.0002 0.0009
(0.0006) (0.0006) (0.0009) (0.0007)
Age squared -0.0000 -0.0000* -0.0000 -0.0000***
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Education -0.0001 0.0001 0.0000 -0.0001
(0.0005) (0.0003) (0.0003) (0.0004)
Observations 17,198 15,198 17,198 15,198
Pseudo-R2 0.0671 0.0757 0.0795 0.0922
I II III IV V VI
Use of checks
Low High Low High Low High
education education education education education education
Notes: This table reestimates the basic regressions for the use of financial in
level of education of the household's head. A household is defined low educa
education. Correspondingly, a household is defined as highly educated if the
left-hand-side variables are as defined in Tables 2 and 3. For a descriptio
regressions include as controls family size, dummies for whether the househ
and industry, and calendar-year dummies. The first two columns' reported co
change in the corresponding regressor on the probability of using checks,
variable. The remaining columns report tobit estimates. The standard error
potential clustering of the residual at the provincial level. The symbols ***
different from zero, respectively, at the 1-, 5-, and 10-percent level.
TABLE 8-MOVERS
Panel A
Area of residence
Panel B
I II III IV V
cannotthat
In this analysis we assume exclude that
people peop
move
for reasons that have areas
nothingwhere the
to do commu
with the
level of social capital in the area.
capital However,
is similar we
to their
Panel A
II III IV V
Checks Cash Stocks Discouraged or Loans from
turned down family and frie
Social capital 1 for 0.4418*** -0.7603*** 0.0902*** -0.0785*** -0.1327***
nonmovers (0.1302) (0.1268) (0.0259) (0.0240) (0.0340)
Social capital 1 of origin 0.1778*** -0.1912*** 0.0379*** -0.0273 -0.0755**
for movers (0.0527) (0.0706) (0.0122) (0.0183) (0.0315)
Social capital 1 of 0.2857** -0.5784*** 0.0492* -0.0485 -0.0517
residence for movers (0.1313) (0.1332) (0.0260) (0.0309) (0.0434)
Judicial inefficiency -0.0616 0.0977*** -0.0022 0.0098** -0.0019
(0.0430) (0.0235) (0.0068) (0.0046) (0.0093)
Judicial inefficiency 0.0065 -0.0109*** 0.0003 -0.0010* 0.0002
squared (0.0041) (0.0026) (0.0006) (0.0005) (0.0011)
Per capita GDP 2.2724*** -0.4388 0.0940 0.3532** 0.1944
(0.5079) (0.3715) (0.2192) (0.1452) (0.1675)
Average years of education 0.0424*** -0.0195 -0.0010 -0.0009 0.0011
(0.0140) (0.0123) (0.0025) (0.0020) (0.0034)
Percentage of households 0.1040 0.0058 -0.0357 0.0915* -0.0484
with mohile phone (0.2944) (0.2735) (0.0641) (0.0491) (0.0813)
Income 0.0091*** -0.0072*** 0.00l1*** 0.0002* -0.0012***
(0.0006) (0.0007) (0.0002) (0.0001) (0.0002)
Income squared -0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000 0.0000* 0.0000***
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Wealth 0.1361*** -0.0792*** 0.0868*** 0.0181*** 0.0195***
(0.0309) (0.0255) (0.0126) (0.0061) (0.0065)
Wealth squared -0.0165 0.0074 -0.0088*** 0.0016* -0.0038***
(0.0110) (0.0089) (0.0030) (0.0008) (0.0012)
Age 0.0078*** -0.0054*** -0.0001 -0.0014*** -0.0026***
(0.0013) (0.0011) (0.0003) (0.0004) (0.0005)
Age squared -0.0001*** 0.0001*** -0.0000 0.0000** 0.0000**
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Education 0.0196*** -0.0087*** 0.0008*** 0.0000 0.0000
(0.0011) (0.0011) (0.0003) (0.0003) (0.0003)
Observations 31,961 31,851 31,851 31,961 31,961
R 2 0.319 0.238 0.130 0.016 0.025
Panel B
I II III IV V
Checks Cash Stocks Discouraged or Loans from
turned down family and frie
Social capital 1 for 0.4833*** -0.7431*** 0.1246*** -0.0964*** -0. 1400** *
nonmovers (0.1526) (0.1199) (0.0341) (0.0326) (0.0412)
0.2634*
Social capital 1 of origin -0.1694 0.0938** -0.1292 -0.1830***
for movers (0.1370) (0.1742) (0.0395) (0.0832) (0.0625)
Social capital 1 of 0.2570 -0.5855*** 0.0317 0.0318 0.0426
residence for movers (0.1749) (0.1910) (0.0486) (0.0776) (0.0615)
Judicial inefficiency -0.0725 0.0904*** -0.0016 0.0132** -0.0024
(0.0476) (0.0233) (0.0083) (0.0060) (0.0102)
Judicial inefficiency 0.0076* -0.0104*** 0.0003 -0.0013* 0.0001
squared (0.0045) (0.0026) (0.0008) (0.0007) (0.0012)
Per capita GDP 2.3066*** -0.6369 0.0650 0.4073*** 0.1142
(0.5661) (0.4739) (0.2770) (0.1452) (0.1718)
Average years of education 0.0462*** -0.0213* -0.0020 -0.0018 0.0008
(0.0158) (0.0123) (0.0031) (0.0024) (0.0036)
Percentage of households 0.1110 -0.0418 -0.0574 0.1031 -0.0757
with mohile phone (0.3116) (0.2669) (0.0757) (0.0662) (0.0891)
TABLE 9 Continued.
Panel B Continued.
I II III IV V
Checks Cash Stocks Discouraged or Loans from
turned down family and frien
Income 0.0083*** -0.0064*** 0.0010*** -0.0001 -0.0011***
(0.0007) (0.0007) (0.0002) (0.0001) (0.0002)
Income squared -0.0000*** 0.0000*** 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000***
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Wealth 0.1426*** -0.0647*** 0.0929*** -0.0169** 0.0285***
(0.0334) (0.0231) (0.0134) (0.0071) (0.0083)
Wealth squared -0.0156 0.0047 -0.0081*** 0.0014 -0.0042***
(0.0117) (0.0079) (0.0027) (0.0009) (0.0013)
Age 0.0114*** -0.0035** 0.0002 -0.0018*** -0.0026***
(0.0017) (0.0015) (0.0004) (0.0005) (0.0006)
Age squared -0.0001*** 0.0000*** -0.0000 0.0000** 0.0000
(0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000) (0.0000)
Education 0.0204*** -0.0078*** 0.0009*** 0.0001 0.0002
(0.0013) (0.0013) (0.0003) (0.0004) (0.0003)
Observations 23,223 23,141 23,141 23,223 23,223
R2 0.291 0.233 0.138 0.015 0.023
our results will underestimate the effect of so- rule out that discrimination might play a role,
cial capital of origin relative to that of we can rule out that discrimination is the only
residence. source of this effect. In fact, it would be hard to
A bias will arise only if people have a pref- argue that individuals born in areas with low
erence for living with others who share the same social capital hold more cash and less stock as a
set of values. Under this hypothesis, people also result of discrimination, as columns I and III of
tend to choose a spouse with a similar set of Table 9 indicate.
values. Hence, we can use the social capital of Furthermore, if discrimination plays a very
origin of the spouse as an instrument for the big role in the relation between social capital
unobservable component of values of each head and the use of financial contracts, the overall
of household. The instrumental variable esti-
effect of social capital for movers should be
mates are reported in Table 9, Panel B. As much bigger than the effect of social capital for
expected, the IV estimates of the social capital nonmovers who do not face discrimination.
of origin tend to be higher in absolute value than This conjecture is not confirmed by our results.
are those of the social capital of residence,The sum of the effects of the two social capital
albeit noisier. measures for movers is almost identical to the
One possible objection to our interpretation total effect for nonmovers.
that the social capital of origin affects the use An alternative interpretation that would ex-
and availability of financial contracts is that the plain some of our results is that movers are
estimated coefficients might be capturing the unable to assess immediately the extent of local
effects of discrimination. Although we cannot networks and norms in their new area of
Our main data source is the Bank of Italy Survey of Household Income and Wealth (SHIW),
which collects detailed data on demographics, household consumption, income, and balance
sheets. We use four waves (1989, 1991, 1993, 1995) because sample size and design, sampling
methodology, and questionnaire content are unchanged. Each survey covers more than 8,000
households for a total of 32,648 household-year observations. Each SHIW surveys a represen
tative sample of the Italian resident population. Sampling is in two stages, first municipalitie
and then households. Households are randomly selected from registry office records. House-
holds are defined as groups of individuals related by blood, marriage, or adoption, and sharing
the same dwelling. The head of the household is conventionally identified with the husband, if
present, otherwise with the person responsible for managing the household's resources. Andrea
Brandolini and Luigi Cannari (1994) present a detailed discussion of sample design, attrition,
and other measurement issues, and comparisons of the SHIW variables with the correspondin
aggregates. Starting in 1989, each SHIW has reinterviewed some households from the previou
surveys. The panel component has increased over time. The SHIW reinterviewed 15 percent of
the previous survey sample in 1989, 27 percent in 1991, 43 percent in 1993, and 45 percent in
1995. In the panel component, the sampling procedure is also determined in two stages:
selection of municipalities (among those sampled in the previous survey), and then selection of
households reinterviewed. This implies that there is a fixed component in the panel (for instance,
households interviewed five times between 1987 to 1995, or four times from 1991 to 1995) and
a new component in every survey (for instance, households reinterviewed only in 1989). The
SHIW has been supplemented with geographical data on social capital, judicial inefficiency, an
economic development.
TABLE Al-Continued.
Industry and job Industry dummies are a series of dummies for the industry where the SHIW
dummies household head works. Job dummies are a series of dummies for the
type of job (employee, professional, self-employed) held by the
household head.
Relative risk aversion Relative risk aversion is the product of the Arrow-Pratt measure of SHIW