The ties that bind us: Social networks and productivity in the factory

Peer Reviewed
31 January 2024

Farzana Afridi, Amrita Dhillon, Swati Sharma

This study analyzes high frequency productivity data from Indian garment manufacturing, exploring how caste-based social networks affect individual and group productivity. With nearly 35,000 worker-days, a 1 percentage point increase in the same-caste workers boosts daily individual productivity by at least 0.09 points. Notably, the least efficient worker's productivity rises by almost 0.17 points with a 1 point increase in caste homogeneity. These findings, robust to unobservable factors, suggest production externalities driven by within-network peer effects as potential explanations.

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Afridi, F., Dhillon, A., & Sharma, S. (2024). The ties that bind us: Social networks and productivity in the factory. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 218, 470–485. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2023.12.026
Publication | 15 January 2024