Trust: The Key to Social Cohesion and Growth in Latin America and the Caribbean (Executive Summary)

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Peer Reviewed icon Peer Reviewed
Date issued
Jan 2022
Editor
Keefer, Philip;
Scartascini, Carlos
Subject
Economy;
Trust;
Public Policy;
Small Business;
Political Trust;
Regulation;
Labor Force;
Public Employment;
Digital Transformation
JEL code
D02 - Institutions: Design, Formation, Operations, and Impact;
D23 - Organizational Behavior • Transaction Costs • Property Rights;
D72 - Political Processes: Rent-Seeking, Lobbying, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior;
D82 - Asymmetric and Private Information • Mechanism Design;
D91 - Intertemporal Household Choice • Life Cycle Models and Saving;
H41 - Public Goods;
H83 - Public Administration • Public Sector Accounting and Audits;
O34 - Intellectual Property and Intellectual Capital
Category
Catalogs and Brochures
Trust is the most pressing and yet least discussed problem confronting Latin America and the Caribbean. Whether in others, in government, or in firms, trust is lower in the region than anywhere else in the world. The economic and political consequences of mistrust ripple through society. It suppresses growth and innovation: investment, entrepreneurship, and employment all flourish when firms and government, workers and employers, banks and borrowers, and consumers and producers trust each other. Trust inside private and public sector organizations is essential for collaboration and innovation. Mistrust distorts democratic decision-making. It keeps citizens from demanding better public services and infrastructure, from joining with others to control corruption, and from making the collective sacrifices that leave everyone better off. The good news is that governments can increase citizen trust with clearer promises of what citizens can expect from them, public sector reforms that enable them to keep their promises, and institutional reforms that strengthen the commitments that citizens make to each other. This book guides decision-makers as they incorporate trust and social cohesion into the comprehensive reforms needed to address the region's most pernicious challenges.