COVID-19与社会信任的性别差异:来自大流行第一波的因果证据。

Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World Pub Date : 2022-08-12 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23780231221117910
Matthias Collischon, Alexander Patzina
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管研究提供了COVID-19封锁措施对信任影响的因果证据,但感染风险的因果影响尚不清楚。为了促进对COVID-19大流行的社会后果的更多研究,我们估计了封锁措施的高发病率是否会导致社会信任的因果变化。我们使用来自德国的具有代表性的家庭面板数据,并采用差异中差异设计。虽然社会信任在大流行的第一阶段有所增加,但差异中的差异分析显示,高发病率对社会信任产生了负面影响。我们的研究表明,女性驱动了这种效应。在受过高等教育的妇女和covid -19前健康状况不佳的妇女中,负面影响尤其大。总的来说,我们的结果表明,发病率的增加表明未知的其他人不遵守。因此,从中期和长期来看,总体积极趋势可能会逆转,导致大流行期间社会凝聚力下降。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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

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

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

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

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.

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