Social Capital vs Institutions in the Growth Process
Abstract
Is social capital always important for economic growth? A number of recent micro studies suggest that interpersonal trust and social capital will have its greatest impact on economic performance when court
institutions are relatively weak. The conventional wisdom from macro
studies, however, is that social capital is unconditionally good for growth.
On the basis of the micro evidence, we outline an investment game between a producer and a lender in an incomplete-contracts setting. A key insight is that social capital will have the greatest e¤ect on the total surplus from the game at lower levels of institutional strength and that the effect of social capital vanishes when institutions are very strong. When
we bring this prediction to an empirical cross-country growth regression,
it is shown that the marginal e¤ect of social capital (in the form of inter-
personal trust) decreases with institutional strength. Our results imply that a one standard deviation rise in social capital in weakly institutionalized Nigeria should increase economic growth by 1.8 percentage points,
whereas the same increase in social capital only increases growth by 0.3
percentage points in strongly institutionalized Canada.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007-03-08Author
Ahlerup, Pelle
Olsson, Ola
Yanagizawa, David
Keywords
social capital
institutions
growth
investment
JEL O11
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
248
Language
eng