Individuals and Communities: The Importance of Neighbors Volunteering

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    In this analysis, I examine the effects of community-level volunteering on an individual’s choices regarding time – whether to work and whether to volunteer. In order to better explain the decision to volunteer, a classic pure public goods structure is contrasted with a less restrictive impure public goods model that admits other possible private motivations. The results of this study undermine the neoclassical notion that volunteering can be understood solely as a pure public good that is provided less when others are seen to be contributing. In fact, individuals are found to be more, not less, likely to volunteer when others in their communities do so. An innovative instrumental variables strategy is used to account for reflection bias and the possible endogeneity caused by selective sorting of individuals into neighborhoods, which allows for a causal interpretation of these results. Employment regressions provide preliminary evidence that average volunteering relates, to some extent, with the decision of whether to participate in the labor force. Variations in the effect of average volunteering across age and gender are also explored. The present work is unique by virtue of its use of a large and representative dataset, along with rigorous statistical testing. I use United States Census 2000 Summary File 3 and Current Population Survey (CPS) 2004–2007 September Supplement file data and control for various individual and community-level characteristics.

    Original languageAmerican English
    Pages (from-to)149-178
    Number of pages30
    JournalJournal of Labor Research
    Volume37
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jun 1 2016

    Bibliographical note

    Publisher Copyright:
    © 2016, Springer Science+Business Media New York.

    Funding

    I would like to thank Rebecca Blank, David Card, Daniel Hamermesh, Esteban Jaimovic, Theo Koutmeridis, Dong Li, James Powell, and especially Giovanni Mastrobuoni as well as the editor and anonymous referees for many helpful comments and suggestions. Most of all, however, I would like to thank Theo Diasakos for his help with this work. I am also grateful to Urmimala Sen for outstanding research assistance. Previous versions of this paper were presented at the Meetings of the Southern, Western, and Midwest Economics Associations. This research was supported by an NSF ADVANCE research grant. All mistakes are my own.

    Funders
    National Science Foundation

      ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

      • Strategy and Management
      • Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
      • Management of Technology and Innovation

      Keywords

      • Census
      • Communities
      • Public goods
      • Volunteer work

      Disciplines

      • Business

      Fingerprint

      Dive into the research topics of 'Individuals and Communities: The Importance of Neighbors Volunteering'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

      Cite this