Who trusts others? community and individual determinants of social capital in Bangladesh?
Abstract
This paper presents new evidence on the individual and community specific
determinants of social trust using data from 96 villages in Bangladesh, a country with
high levels of institutional corruption and poor governance. We find perceived
institutional trust to be positively correlated with inter-personal trust. At the same
time, there is significant social distance amongst various faith groups in our data:
Hindus (religious minorities) trust Muslims and other non-Hindus more than Muslims
trust Hindus and other non-Muslims. We also find no evidence that Hindus are
distrustful of the wider society in general. The lack of trust towards Hindus (and
other non-Muslims) is significantly correlated with Islamic school attendance
amongst Muslim respondents whilst religiosity appears to play no role. These findings
are robust to control for a wide range of individual and community level correlates
and do not proxy for between religion differences in institutional trust. Lastly, when
compared to religion, effects of institutional trust and local economic development
(including presence of NGO activity) are modest.