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Economic conditions and native-immigrant asymmetries in generalized social trust
Institution:1. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical Faculty, Heinrich, Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany;2. WHO Regional Office for Europe, Copenhagen, Denmark;3. Institute of Psychiatry, King’ College, London, United Kingdom;4. NASP, National Centre for Suicide Research and Prevention of Mental Ill-Health, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden;5. UMCN Nijmegen, Utrecht, The Netherlands;6. Derbyshire Mental Health Services, Derby, United Kingdom;1. Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts, Boston, United States;2. Department of Politics, Princeton University, United States
Abstract:Previous research suggests that individual-level factors such as socio-economic disadvantage and discrimination account for lower levels of generalized social trust of immigrants when compared to natives. This study examines how individual and contextual economic conditions impact such trust gaps. We argue that—beyond objective economic circumstances—evaluations of economic opportunities matter for immigrants’ integration, and for their social trust. Using data from the European Social Survey 2012, 2016, merged with regional economic conditions, results from two-way fixed effects multilevel models show that gaps in social trust are wider in regions where the state of the economy is predominantly evaluated as being prosperous. Additional tests show that, in those regions, immigrants report higher levels of discrimination and lower levels of satisfaction with social life. This study adds the important finding to the literature on social inequality and immigrant integration that favorable economic conditions may, paradoxically, increase native-immigrant trust asymmetries.
Keywords:Immigration  Social integration  Ethnic discrimination
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