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Social Trust, Pattern of Difference, and Subjective Well-Being
Author(s) -
Bai Caiquan,
Gong Yuan,
Feng Chen
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
sage open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.357
H-Index - 32
ISSN - 2158-2440
DOI - 10.1177/2158244019865765
Subject(s) - psychology , subjective well being , social trust , correlation , social psychology , positive correlation , positive relationship , social relationship , significant difference , well being , social capital , happiness , sociology , statistics , social science , medicine , geometry , mathematics , psychotherapist
Based on the pattern of difference in Chinese social trust, this study classifies the social trust into trust in family members, trust in acquaintances, and trust in strangers. Then, the correlational relationship between different types of social trust and subjective well-being is examined using the micro survey data in China. It is found that different types of social trust vary greatly in the correlation with subjective well-being. The main findings are as follows: (a) Trust in family members has no significant correlation with subjective well-being; (b) Only “totally trust acquaintances” has a significant positive correlation with subjective well-being; (c) Trust in strangers has a significant positive correlation with subjective well-being—the higher the trust level, the stronger the correlation with subjective well-being will be—and (d) Urban–rural and male–female differences exist in the correlational relationship between trust in strangers and subjective well-being.

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