Does education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of government

Generalized trust has become a prominent concept at the nexus of several disciplines, and the wide differences in trust between different societies continue to puzzle the social sciences. In this study, we explore the effects of micro and macro level factors in explaining an individual's propen...

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Main Authors: Charron, N, Rothstein, B
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2016
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author Charron, N
Rothstein, B
author_facet Charron, N
Rothstein, B
author_sort Charron, N
collection OXFORD
description Generalized trust has become a prominent concept at the nexus of several disciplines, and the wide differences in trust between different societies continue to puzzle the social sciences. In this study, we explore the effects of micro and macro level factors in explaining an individual's propensity to ‘trust others'. We hypothesize that higher levels of education will lead to higher social trust in individuals, given that the context (country or regions within countries) in which they reside has a sufficiently impartial and non-corrupt institutional setting. However, the positive effect of education on trust among individuals is expected to be negligible in contexts with greater levels of corruption and favoritism toward certain people are more inclined to view the system as ‘rigged' as they become more educated. This multi-level interaction effect is tested using original survey data of 85,000 individuals in 24 European countries. Using hierarchical modelling, we find strong support for our hypothesis. This effect is robust to a number of specifications, and even holds for regional variation of institutional quality (QoG) within countries – with the strongest effects being higher education – yet the country effects of QoG are strongest.
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spelling oxford-uuid:26a55f57-6ad4-4e77-a261-8f0e7cafa2c52022-03-26T12:02:08ZDoes education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of governmentJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:26a55f57-6ad4-4e77-a261-8f0e7cafa2c5Symplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2016Charron, NRothstein, BGeneralized trust has become a prominent concept at the nexus of several disciplines, and the wide differences in trust between different societies continue to puzzle the social sciences. In this study, we explore the effects of micro and macro level factors in explaining an individual's propensity to ‘trust others'. We hypothesize that higher levels of education will lead to higher social trust in individuals, given that the context (country or regions within countries) in which they reside has a sufficiently impartial and non-corrupt institutional setting. However, the positive effect of education on trust among individuals is expected to be negligible in contexts with greater levels of corruption and favoritism toward certain people are more inclined to view the system as ‘rigged' as they become more educated. This multi-level interaction effect is tested using original survey data of 85,000 individuals in 24 European countries. Using hierarchical modelling, we find strong support for our hypothesis. This effect is robust to a number of specifications, and even holds for regional variation of institutional quality (QoG) within countries – with the strongest effects being higher education – yet the country effects of QoG are strongest.
spellingShingle Charron, N
Rothstein, B
Does education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of government
title Does education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of government
title_full Does education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of government
title_fullStr Does education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of government
title_full_unstemmed Does education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of government
title_short Does education lead to higher generalized trust? The importance of quality of government
title_sort does education lead to higher generalized trust the importance of quality of government
work_keys_str_mv AT charronn doeseducationleadtohighergeneralizedtrusttheimportanceofqualityofgovernment
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