COVID-19 and Gender Differences in Social Trust: Causal Evidence from the First Wave of the Pandemic

被引:1
|
作者
Collischon, Matthias [1 ]
Patzina, Alexander [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Inst Employment Res, Nurnberg, Germany
[2] Univ Bamberg, Chair Sociol, Bamberg, Germany
来源
SOCIUS | 2022年 / 8卷
关键词
COVID-19; difference-in-difference; household panel data; gender; interpersonal trust;
D O I
10.1177/23780231221117910
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Although research provides causal evidence on the effects of COVID-19 lockdown measures on trust, causal effects of infection risks are missing. To contribute to increasing research on the societal consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic, we estimate whether high incidence rates net of lockdown measures induce causal changes in social trust. We use representative household panel data from Germany and employ a difference-in-difference design. Although social trust increased during the first phase of the pandemic, the difference-in-difference analysis reveals that high incidences have a negative effect on social trust. We show that females drive this effect. The negative effect is especially large among highly educated women and women with poor pre-COVID-19 health. Overall, our results suggest that increasing incidences signal noncompliance of unknown others. Consequently, the overall positive trend might reverse in the medium and long run, leading to declines in social cohesion over the course of the pandemic.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Correlates of the country differences in the infection and mortality rates during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic: evidence from Bayesian model averaging
    Stojkoski, Viktor
    Utkovski, Zoran
    Jolakoski, Petar
    Tevdovski, Dragan
    Kocarev, Ljupcho
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2022, 12 (01)
  • [22] Social trust and stress symptoms among older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic: evidence from Asia
    Jiang, Nan
    Wu, Alfred M.
    Cheng, Edmund W.
    BMC GERIATRICS, 2022, 22 (01)
  • [23] Social trust and stress symptoms among older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic: evidence from Asia
    Nan Jiang
    Alfred M. Wu
    Edmund W. Cheng
    BMC Geriatrics, 22
  • [24] The forces behind social unrest: Evidence from the Covid-19 pandemic
    Lackner, Mario
    Sunde, Uwe
    Winter-Ebmer, Rudolf
    PLOS ONE, 2025, 20 (01):
  • [25] Social stigma in time of COVID-19 pandemic: evidence from India
    Sahoo, Barsa Priyadarsinee
    Patel, Avanish Bhai
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL POLICY, 2021, 41 (11-12) : 1170 - 1182
  • [26] Mothers, Household Bubbles, and Social Support During the First Wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Humble, Aine M.
    McIsaac, Jessie-Lee D.
    JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE FAMILY STUDIES, 2024, 54 (03) : 256 - 282
  • [27] Emergency policing and public trust in the police in Ghana: evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic
    Dzordzormenyoh, Michael K.
    Dzordzormenyoh, Claudia
    Dogbey-Gakpetor, Jerry
    POLICING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLICE STRATEGIES & MANAGEMENT, 2024, 47 (04) : 576 - 594
  • [28] Public trust, policing, and the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from an electoral authoritarian regime
    Blair, Robert A.
    Curtice, Travis
    Dow, David
    Grossman, Guy
    SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2022, 305
  • [29] Social trust in the midst of pandemic crisis: Implications from COVID-19 of South Korea
    Kye, Bongoh
    Hwang, Sun-Jae
    RESEARCH IN SOCIAL STRATIFICATION AND MOBILITY, 2020, 68
  • [30] Trust and compliance: Milieu-specific differences in social cohesion during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany
    Schroeder, Tim
    Speer, Anne
    Sachweh, Patrick
    Groh-Samberg, Olaf
    FRONTIERS IN SOCIOLOGY, 2022, 7