English

Estimating Social Norm Complementarities

General Economics 2026-05-18 v1 Economics Methodology

Abstract

We develop a model of choice over social norms that allows for complementarities along two dimensions: \textit{technological}, analogous to complementarities between consumption goods, and social, capturing returns from conformity. Together, these determine whether two norms are complements, substitutes, or independent, as defined by how the equilibrium prevalence of one norm responds to a marginal shift in the utility of another. We estimate the model using repeated cross-sections from Sierra Leone and Nigeria, focusing on female genital cutting, polygyny, and child marriage. Social returns are significant across all specifications. For female genital cutting and child marriage, we find evidence of complementarities, especially strong in Sierra Leone. For polygyny and child marriage, we find evidence of social substitutability, particularly in Nigeria. We interpret these differences using insights from anthropology. Finally, we iterate the model forward to study policy counterfactuals, assessing the potential effects of legal reforms and social interventions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2605.15405,
  title  = {Estimating Social Norm Complementarities},
  author = {Eliana La Ferrara and Cheaheon Lim and Davide Viviano},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.15405},
  year   = {2026}
}