Statistical Estimation of the Casual Effect of Social Economy on Subjective Well-Being

It is well known that measuring the noneconomic outcomes produced by social economy organizations is fairly difficult and complex. Usually, social economy organizations feature participatory and democratic decision-making processes that help create social capital and relational goods, and they are i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Voluntas (Manchester, England) England), 2018-06, Vol.29 (3), p.511-525
Hauptverfasser: Jang, Jongick, Kim, Tae-Hwan, Hong, Hoon, Yoo, Chung Sik, Park, Jonghyun
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 511
container_title Voluntas (Manchester, England)
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creator Jang, Jongick
Kim, Tae-Hwan
Hong, Hoon
Yoo, Chung Sik
Park, Jonghyun
description It is well known that measuring the noneconomic outcomes produced by social economy organizations is fairly difficult and complex. Usually, social economy organizations feature participatory and democratic decision-making processes that help create social capital and relational goods, and they are interested in social integration; accordingly, they tend to create an organizational culture that encourages their workers to contribute to local communities. Therefore, the hypothesis that the increased activities of social economy organizations have a causal effect on the subjective well-being of the people living near those organizations is highly plausible. In this paper, we estimate the causal effect and attempt to test the hypothesis statistically by using a dataset called the "Seoul Survey," which provides observations on the subjective well-being of 45,496 citizens living in Seoul and the size of social economy organizations. Controlling for variables at the district level and the appropriate socioeconomic characteristics of each individual in the dataset, we find that the size of social organizations is highly significant.
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subjects Causality
Citizen participation
Citizens
Civil society
Community
Decision making
Estimation
Happiness
Hypotheses
Hypothesis testing
Organizational culture
Original Paper
Political Science
Relational goods
Social capital
Social integration
Social Policy
Social Sciences
Socioeconomic factors
Well being
title Statistical Estimation of the Casual Effect of Social Economy on Subjective Well-Being
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