The Global Trust Inventory as a “Proxy Measure” for Social Capital: Measurement and Impact in 11 Democratic Societies

The Global Trust Inventory (GTI), conceptually assessing trust in others ranging from close interpersonal relationships to relationships with government and financial institutions as a whole, was administered to representative online samples in 11 democratic states (N = 11,917 from Europe, the Ameri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cross-cultural psychology 2018-06, Vol.49 (5), p.789-810
Hauptverfasser: Liu, James H., Milojev, Petar, Gil de Zúñiga, Homero, Zhang, Robert Jiqi
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container_issue 5
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container_title Journal of cross-cultural psychology
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creator Liu, James H.
Milojev, Petar
Gil de Zúñiga, Homero
Zhang, Robert Jiqi
description The Global Trust Inventory (GTI), conceptually assessing trust in others ranging from close interpersonal relationships to relationships with government and financial institutions as a whole, was administered to representative online samples in 11 democratic states (N = 11,917 from Europe, the Americas, and New Zealand). A seven-factor solution had configural, metric, and reasonable scalar invariance in multi-group confirmatory factor analysis. Using latent profile analysis, individual-level measures of trust were derived that complement existing measures of social capital in their impact and implications. Western societies had proportionately more people with high propensity to trust, Catholic/European intermediate, and Latin American societies the least. A High Trust Profile had virtues associated with social capital: greater participation in political discussion, greater elaboration of political thinking, more community engagement, less prejudice, and greater participation in elections. A Low Trust Profile exhibited opposite tendencies. Demographically, high trust was associated with higher self-reported social status, home ownership, older age, and political conservatism. A more complex set of relationships differentiated two intermediate profiles, dubbed Moderate and Low Institutional Trust. Conceptually, the GTI operationalizes a holistic view of trust as a “synthetic force” that holds various aspects of society together, ranging from interpersonal to institutionalized relationships.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0022022118766619
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Catholics
Confirmatory factor analysis
Conservatism
Elaboration
Elections
Factor Analysis
Financial institutions
Home ownership
Individual differences
Interpersonal relations
Interpersonal Relationship
Measurement
Measures
Ownership
Political participation
Prejudice
Social Capital
Social participation
Social Status
Trust
title The Global Trust Inventory as a “Proxy Measure” for Social Capital: Measurement and Impact in 11 Democratic Societies
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