Media and Social Capital

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP16500

Authors: Filipe Campante; Ruben Durante; Andrea Tesei

Abstract: We survey the empirical literature in economics on the impact of media technologies on social capital. Motivated by a simple model of information and collective action, we cover a range of different outcomes related to social capital, from social and political participation to interpersonal trust, in its benign and destructive manifestations. The impact of media technologies hinges on their content (“information” vs “entertainment”), their effectiveness in fostering coordination, and the networks they create, as well as individual characteristics and media consumption choices

Keywords: social capital; media; collective action; information; coordination; participation

JEL Codes: D71; D72; D74; D83; D84; Z13


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
media content (L82)collective action (D70)
entertainment content (L82)collective action (D70)
media content (L82)individual beliefs about others' preferences (D01)
individual beliefs about others' preferences (D01)collective action (D70)
media technologies (L96)coordination outcomes (E61)
media technologies (L96)harmful actions (I12)

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