MASTER
 
 

Inequalities Seminar - Then and Now: How Neighbourhood Deprivation in Youth Influences Attitudes towards Inequality

By LSE International Inequalities Institute (other events)

Tuesday, February 13 2024 12:30 PM 1:30 PM BST
 
ABOUT ABOUT

Then and Now: How Neighbourhood Deprivation in Youth Influences Attitudes Towards Inequality

Room LG.03 Parish Hall, Sheffield Street (and on Zoom)

Refreshments served at 12.15pm before seminar commences at 12:30pm. 

Speaker
Dr Franco Bonomi Bezzo, Post-Doctoral Researcher, La Statale, University of Milan

Cultural capital -- specific human capital that allows individuals access to opportunity in stratified societies -- has long been a major field of research in sociology. Economics has been slow to study this concept in part because of the difficulty in measuring cultural capital and in finding suitable empirical settings to study its effects. Leveraging novel data on historical social norms of each one of India's 4,635 ethnic groups (castes, tribes, etc), we generate a new measure of cultural capital by calculating the cultural distance between each of India communities and the economically dominant group in every village, whose control of land gives them significant power over their neighbor's economic, social, and political lives. We use a difference-in-differences strategy that compares members of the same community experiencing differences in cultural capital due to differences in the dominant community across villages. We find that individuals living in communities with culturally distant dominant groups experience large reductions in educational attainment, anthropometric outcomes, consumption and income per capita.

For online attendance please register here: https://lse.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZAsdu6orD8rHNSQEvmc4L9UA2OtOdzHCX1n

LSE International Inequalities Institute