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The Diffusion of Microfinance

TLDR
This article examined how participation in a micro-finance program diffuses through social networks and found that participants are significantly more likely to pass information on to friends and acquaintances than informed non-participants.
Abstract
We examine how participation in a microfinance program diffuses through social networks. We collected detailed demographic and social network data in 43 villages in South India before microfinance was introduced in those villages and then tracked eventual participation. We exploit exogenous variation in the importance (in a network sense) of the people who were first informed about the program, "the injection points". Microfinance participation is higher when the injection points have higher eigenvector centrality. We estimate structural models of diffusion that allow us to (i) determine the relative roles of basic information transmission versus other forms of peer influence, and (ii) distinguish information passing by participants and non-participants. We find that participants are significantly more likely to pass information on to friends and acquaintances than informed non-participants, but that information passing by non-participants is still substantial and significant, accounting for roughly a third of informedness and participation. We also find that, conditioned on being informed, an individual's decision is not significantly affected by the participation of her acquaintances.

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Social Investments, Informal Risk Sharing, and Inequality

TL;DR: This paper studied costly network formation in the context of risk sharing and found that overinvestment in social relationships within group (e.g., caste, ethnicity), but underinvestment across group, results in financial inequality and increasing the centrality of the most central agents.

Domestic water supply in rural Viet Nam - Between self-supply and piped schemes

Antje Wegner
TL;DR: In this paper, the dissemination of strategies for improving domestic water supply in rural Viet Nam based on statistical micro-data is analyzed, where practices of household water treatment are analyzed on household level, the question of piped scheme coverage is decomposed into two sub-questions.
Posted Content

Consistently estimating graph statistics using Aggregated Relational Data

TL;DR: Criteria for consistent estimation of individual and graph level statistics from ARD data is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diffusing Political Concerns: How Unemployment Information Passed between Social Ties Influences Danish Voters

TL;DR: While social pressure is widely believed to influence voters, evidence that information passed between social ties affects beliefs, policy preferences, and voting behavior is limited as mentioned in this paper, which is a limitation of our work.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Informational Role of Ownership Networks in Loan Monitoring

TL;DR: In this paper, a large-sample evidence on the informational role of inter-irm ownership networks in bank lending is presented, which suggests that ownership networks facilitate the transmission of private information for bank lending.
References
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TL;DR: Simple models of networks that can be tuned through this middle ground: regular networks ‘rewired’ to introduce increasing amounts of disorder are explored, finding that these systems can be highly clustered, like regular lattices, yet have small characteristic path lengths, like random graphs.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Maximizing the spread of influence through a social network

TL;DR: An analysis framework based on submodular functions shows that a natural greedy strategy obtains a solution that is provably within 63% of optimal for several classes of models, and suggests a general approach for reasoning about the performance guarantees of algorithms for these types of influence problems in social networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemic Spreading in Scale-Free Networks

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