Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit / Institute for the Study of Labor
Abstract
European labor markets are characterized by the low geographical mobility of workers. The
absence of mobility is a factor behind high unemployment when jobless people prefer to
remain in their home region rather than to go prospecting in more dynamic areas. In this
paper, we attempt to understand the determinants of mobility by introducing the concept of
local social capital. Using data from a European household panel (ECHP), we provide
various measures of social capital, which appears to be a strong factor of immobility. It is also
a fairly large factor of unemployment when social capital is clearly local, while other types of
social capital are found to have a positive effect on employability. We also find evidence of
the reciprocal causality, that is, individuals born in another region have accumulated less
local social capital. Finally, observing that individuals in the South of Europe appear to
accumulate more local social capital, while in Northern Europe they tend to invest in more
general types of social capital, we argue that part of the European unemployment puzzle can
be better understood thanks to the concept of local social capital