Social capital and civil society

http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2000/wp0074.pdf

Social capital is important to the efficient functioning of modern economies and is the sine qua non of stable liberal democracy. It constitutes the cultural component of modern societies, which in other respects have been organized since the Enlightenment on the basis of formal institutions, the rule of law, and rationality. Building social capital has typically been seen as a task for "second generation" economic reform; but unlike economic policies or even economic institutions, social capital can not be so easily created or shaped by public policy. This paper define social capital, explore its economic and political functions, as well as its origins and make some suggestions for can it be cultivated.

Author(s): Fukuyama, Francis Originator(s): International Monetary Fund
Resource added in: 30/05/2001
Available languages: English
Economic Development, Social Capital, Equity, Living Conditions, Advocacy
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