Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
883449 Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 2015 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Social capital important determinant of economic outcomes.•Examine an historical immigration event concentrated in Southern Italy.•Demonstrate different norms between immigrant and host populations.•These norms appear resilient.•These differences are robust to IV estimation.

A range of evidence exists demonstrating that social capital is associated with a number of important economic outcomes such as economic growth, trade and crime. A recent literature goes further to illustrate how historical events and variation can lead to the development of differing and consequential social norms. This paper examines the related questions of how persistent initial variations in social capital are, and the extent to which immigrant groups do or do not converge to the cultural and social norms of their recipient country by examining a unique and geographically concentrated immigration event in 16th century Italy. We demonstrate that despite the substantial time since migration these communities still display different behavior consistent with higher civic capital than other comparable Italian communities. Moreover, we demonstrate that this difference does not appear to have changed over the last 70 years. For instance, differences in voter turnout apparent in the late 1940s remain in the 21st century. This latter finding has implications for our view of the likelihood of assimilation of immigrant groups to local norms, particularly in cases of large-scale migration.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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