The Long-Run Effects of Male-Biased Sex Ratios on Mateship and Social Capital
Sefa Awaworyi Churchill (sefa.churchill@rmit.edu.au),
Russell Smyth and
Trong-Anh Trinh (trong-anh.trinh@monash.edu)
Additional contact information
Sefa Awaworyi Churchill: School of Economics, Finance & Marketing, RMIT University, VIC, Australia
Trong-Anh Trinh: Centre for Health Economics, Monash University, VIC, Australia
No 2024-02, Monash Economics Working Papers from Monash University, Department of Economics
Abstract:
We employ a natural experiment – the transport of convicts to the British colonies of New South Wales and Van Diemen’s Land in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries – to examine the long-run effect of gender norms on the evolution of mateship and the formation of social capital in modern-day Australia. We find that people who live in areas in which sex ratios were historically male-biased, have higher social capital. Our instrumental variable estimates suggest that a standard deviation increase in the historical population sex ratio causes a 12.3% increase in social capital, while the reduced form estimates indicate that a standard deviation increase in the convict sex ratio causes a 5.4% increase in social capital. We show that gender norms have been transmitted within families and via marriage through assortative matching, as well as through shared remembrance in the form of war memorials in neighbourhoods in which sex ratios were historically male-biased. We explore the effect of gender norms on specific facets of social capital and find that in neighbourhoods characterised by conservative gender norms and well-defined masculinity norms due to historically high sex ratios, people are more likely to help each other, more likely to do things together and are more close-knit.
Keywords: sex ratios; gender norms; convicts; social capital; Australia (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I31 J16 N37 N47 O10 Z13 Z18 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-evo, nep-hea, nep-his and nep-soc
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