How social capital helps communities weather the COVID-19 pandemic. Makridis, C. A. & Wu, C. PloS One, 16:e0245135, 2021.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Why have the effects of COVID-19 been so unevenly geographically distributed in the United States? This paper investigates the role of social capital as a mediating factor for the spread of the virus. Because social capital is associated with greater trust and relationships within a community, it could endow individuals with a greater concern for others, thereby leading to more hygienic practices and social distancing. Using data for over 2,700 US counties, we investigate how social capital explains the level and growth rate of infections. We find that moving a county from the 25th to the 75th percentile of the distribution of social capital would lead to a 18% and 5.7% decline in the cumulative number of infections and deaths, as well as suggestive evidence of a lower spread of the virus. Our results are robust to many demographic characteristics, controls, and alternative measures of social capital.
@Article{Makridis2021,
  author          = {Makridis, Christos A. and Wu, Cary},
  journal         = {{PloS} {O}ne},
  title           = {How social capital helps communities weather the COVID-19 pandemic.},
  year            = {2021},
  issn            = {1932-6203},
  pages           = {e0245135},
  volume          = {16},
  abstract        = {Why have the effects of COVID-19 been so unevenly geographically distributed in the United States? This paper investigates the role of social capital as a mediating factor for the spread of the virus. Because social capital is associated with greater trust and relationships within a community, it could endow individuals with a greater concern for others, thereby leading to more hygienic practices and social distancing. Using data for over 2,700 US counties, we investigate how social capital explains the level and growth rate of infections. We find that moving a county from the 25th to the 75th percentile of the distribution of social capital would lead to a 18% and 5.7% decline in the cumulative number of infections and deaths, as well as suggestive evidence of a lower spread of the virus. Our results are robust to many demographic characteristics, controls, and alternative measures of social capital.},
  citation-subset = {IM},
  completed       = {2021-02-05},
  country         = {United States},
  doi             = {10.1371/journal.pone.0245135},
  issn-linking    = {1932-6203},
  issue           = {1},
  keywords        = {COVID-19, epidemiology, prevention & control, psychology; Communicable Disease Control; Community Participation; Humans; Local Government; Social Factors; Trust; United States},
  nlm-id          = {101285081},
  pmc             = {PMC7846018},
  pmid            = {33513146},
  pubmodel        = {Electronic-eCollection},
  pubstate        = {epublish},
  revised         = {2021-02-06},
}

Downloads: 0