4.6 Article

Clans and calamity: How social capital saved lives during China's Great Famine

Journal

JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
Volume 157, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2022.102865

Keywords

Social capital; Disasters; Family clans; China's great famine; Mortality

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Funding

  1. Zhejiang Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project [21WZQH01Z]
  2. China Merchants Foundation
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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This paper examines the role of social capital in disaster relief during China's Great Famine and finds that counties with a higher clan density have significantly less increase in the mortality rate. The impact of social capital may have operated through enabling collective action against excessive government procurement.
This paper examines the role of social capital, embedded in kinship-based clans, in disaster relief during China's Great Famine (1958-1961). Using a county-year panel and a difference-in-differences strategy, we find that the rise in the mortality rate during the famine years is significantly less in counties with a higher clan density. Analysis using a nationally representative household survey corroborates this finding. Investigation of potential mechanisms suggests that social capital's impact on famine may have operated through enabling collective action against excessive government procurement. These results provide evidence that societal forces can ameliorate damages caused by faulty government policies in times of crisis.

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