Matching and Network Effects

The matching of individuals in teams is a key element in the functioning of an economy. The network of social ties can potentially transmit important information on abilities and reputations and also help mitigate matching frictions by facilitating interactions among "screened" individuals...

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Published in:Journal of the European Economic Association 2010-01, Vol.8 (1), p.203-231
Main Authors: Fafchamps, Marcel, van der Leij, Marco J., Goyal, Sanjeev
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The matching of individuals in teams is a key element in the functioning of an economy. The network of social ties can potentially transmit important information on abilities and reputations and also help mitigate matching frictions by facilitating interactions among "screened" individuals. We conjecture that the probability of two individuals forming a team falls in the distance between the two individuals in the network of existing social ties. The objective of this paper is to empirically test this conjecture. We examine the formation of coauthor relations among economists over a twenty-year period. Our principal finding is that a new collaboration emerges faster among two researchers if they are "closer" in the existing coauthor network among economists. This proximity effect on collaboration is strong: Being at a network distance of 2 instead of 3, for instance, raises the probability of initiating a collaboration by 27%.
ISSN:1542-4766
1542-4774
DOI:10.1111/j.1542-4774.2010.tb00500.x