Young People's Well-Being and the Association with Social Capital, i.e. Social Networks, Trust and Reciprocity




Tuominen Minna, Haanpää Leena

PublisherSpringer

2022

Social Indicators Research

SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH

SOC INDIC RES

159

617

645

29

0303-8300

1573-0921

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-021-02762-z

https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-021-02762-z

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/66529032



The paper explores the association between social capital of young people at 12-13 years and their subjective well-being using Finland's sub-sample of the third wave of the International Survey of Children's Well-Being. Despite much previous research on this topic, relatively little knowledge is accumulated given that different studies define and measure social capital differently. In line with Robert Putnam, we understand social capital as a combination of social networks, trust, and norms of reciprocity. We measure well-being with two context-free scales: a one-dimensional overall life satisfaction scale and a five-dimensional Student's life satisfaction scale. The analysis is done with linear and unconditional quantile regression. The results indicate that all three dimensions of social capital are significantly associated with well-being. Of the three, trust is the strongest predictor explaining over 30% of the variance in both well-being scales. The study demonstrates the relevance of considering all dimensions of social capital together to avoid unobserved variable bias. Quantile regression reveals that while social capital is important for well-being across the quantiles, it is particularly important for the youth who fare poorly otherwise. Family-related variables showed the strongest association with well-being while relationships with friends, schoolmates, teachers, and other people mattered considerably less.

Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 14:45