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Social Capital: Meaning, Importance and Role in Good Governance | UPSC Ethics Notes

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Social Capital

Social capital refers to the networks, norms, and social trust that facilitate coordination and cooperation for mutual benefit. It is the “glue” that holds societies together. 

Robert Putnam

Social capital refers to features of social organisation such as networks, norms, and social trust that facilitate coordination and cooperation for mutual benefit.

Importance of Social Capital

  • Builds trust and reduces conflict
    • When people trust each other — whether neighbours, communities, or institutions — they cooperate more easily and fight less. Social capital creates this trust organically through shared experiences, repeated interactions, and common values. A society with high trust spends less energy on suspicion and more on progress.
  • Enables collective action without coercion
    • Social capital allows people to work together for a common goal without the government forcing them to. Communities with strong bonds can mobilise volunteers, organise cleanups, or pool resources on their own. This is the foundation of civil society — people helping people because they genuinely feel connected.
  • Strengthens democratic governance
    • Democracy works best when citizens actively participate — attending gram sabhas, questioning local officials, voting, and holding institutions accountable. All of this requires civic awareness and community networks. Where social capital is strong, people are more informed, more engaged, and harder to manipulate.
  • Accelerates economic development
    • Economic transactions become smoother when people trust each other. Contracts are honoured, information is shared, and individuals are more willing to take economic risks because of mutual trust and cooperation. For economically weaker sections, social networks often function as an important form of capital.
      • In many rural areas, farmers depend on cooperative societies and informal community networks for borrowing seeds, sharing equipment, accessing market information, and managing agricultural risks
  • Improves public health outcomes
    • Communities with strong social bonds respond better to health crises. People listen to neighbours, not just official advisories. Vaccination drives succeed faster, mental health improves, and vulnerable people are looked after. Isolation, on the other hand — a sign of low social capital — worsens both physical and mental health.
  • Enhances educational achievement
    • Students from communities with engaged parents and active social networks perform better in school — even with the same quality of teachers. When parents talk to each other, share information about schools, and hold teachers accountable, education quality improves from the ground up.
    • James Coleman’s research, particularly in the late 1980s, established that the “social capital” within a community—networks, trust, and shared norms among parents—significantly boosts student achievement, often outweighing the direct impact of school resources or individual teacher quality. 
  • Acts as a safety net for the poor
    • For people with no savings and no formal insurance, social networks are survival. When a crop fails or a family member falls ill, it is neighbours and community members who step in first. This informal social security system works because of the deep trust and reciprocity built over years of living together.
  • Helps bridge social divisions
    • Bridging social capital — connections across different castes, religions, or regions — is a powerful tool against discrimination and polarisation. When people from different groups interact regularly and respectfully, stereotypes weaken and prejudices fade. This is why diverse schools, sports teams, and workplaces matter so much for social harmony.
  • Supports effective disaster management
    • When disaster strikes — floods, cyclones, earthquakes — the first responders are almost always community members, not the government. How fast they respond and how organised they are depends entirely on the social capital that already existed. Communities with strong bonds evacuate faster, share resources, and recover more quickly.
  • Makes governance more efficient
    • When citizens trust the government and the government trusts citizens, policy implementation becomes smoother. Schemes like MNREGA or PM Awas Yojana work far better where gram sabhas are active and communities hold officials accountable. Social capital reduces corruption by making it harder for officials to cheat when communities are watchful and vocal.

Social capital is an invisible yet powerful asset for society and governance. Trust, cooperation, and strong social networks are essential for economic progress, democratic stability, ethical governance, and social harmony. A society rich in social capital is better equipped to achieve inclusive and sustainable development.

Sample Mains Question

Q1. What do you understand by social values? Explain their importance in maintaining social harmony.
(150 words, 10 marks)

Q2. Social values are the moral foundation of democracy and governance. Discuss.
(150 words, 10 marks)

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