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Economics & Human Biology

Social Capital and Health: Evidence that Ancestral Trust Promotes Health Among Children of Immigrants

Journal Article
Reference
Ljunge, Martin (2014). “Social Capital and Health: Evidence that Ancestral Trust Promotes Health Among Children of Immigrants”. Economics & Human Biology 15, 165–186. doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2014.09.001

Author
Martin Ljunge

This paper presents evidence that generalized trust promotes health. Children of immigrants in a broad set of European countries with ancestry from across the world are studied. Individuals are examined within country of residence using variation in trust across countries of ancestry. The approach addresses reverse causality and concerns that the trust measure picks up institutional factors in the individual's contextual setting. There is a significant positive estimate of ancestral trust in explaining self-assessed health. The finding is robust to accounting for individual, parental, and extensive ancestral country characteristics. Individuals with higher ancestral trust are also less likely to be hampered by health problems in their daily life, providing evidence of trust influencing real life outcomes. Individuals with high trust feel and act healthier, enabling a more productive life.