Social capital, social heterogeneity, and electoral turnout

Among the many studied determinants of voting, we predict that i) increased social capital will be positively associated with turnout, while increased heterogeneity will be negatively associated; ii) both factors will work through their influence on the costs of information gathering and on the soci...

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Published in:Kyklos (Basel) Vol. 77; no. 4; pp. 1142 - 1168
Main Authors: Clark, Jeremy, François, Abel, Gergaud, Olivier
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-11-2024
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Summary:Among the many studied determinants of voting, we predict that i) increased social capital will be positively associated with turnout, while increased heterogeneity will be negatively associated; ii) both factors will work through their influence on the costs of information gathering and on the social norms of voting; and iii) that heterogeneity will interact with social capital in its association with turnout. We test these predictions at the extremely fine “meshblock” level by regressing New Zealand voter turnout in its 2017 national election on its 2013 census characteristics. We use roughly 40,000 meshblock volunteering rates to measure social capital, and heterogeneity based primarily on ethnic fragmentation. We find social capital is positively associated with voter turnout, while heterogeneity is negatively associated. We find robust evidence consistent with ethnic heterogeneity working through information costs and social norms, but less so social capital. We also find a robust interaction between social capital and heterogeneity in their association with turnout, consistent with ethnic heterogeneity raising bridging social capital that has a stronger association with turnout than in‐group bonding social capital.
Bibliography:The authors would like to thank Anthony Pengelly of the New Zealand Electoral Commission for his assistance in providing voter turnout data mapped to census boundaries. Olivier Gergaud benefited from an Erskine Visiting Fellowship in the Department of Economics and Finance of the University of Canterbury (Christchurch, New Zealand) where this project was initiated. We would like to express our gratitude for this generous financial support.
ISSN:0023-5962
1467-6435
DOI:10.1111/kykl.12403