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Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa

It has been argued that one of the key benefits of raising the levels of education in a nation is the enhancement of trust. Trust has been found to be a critical driver of economic development and growth and is thus of particular value to South Africa. There has been rising literature, however, show...

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Main Author: Sigauke, Simphiwe Ntombizodwa
Other Authors: Njozela, Lindokuhle
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sigauke, Simphiwe Ntombizodwa
author2 Njozela, Lindokuhle
author_browse Njozela, Lindokuhle
Sigauke, Simphiwe Ntombizodwa
author_facet Njozela, Lindokuhle
Sigauke, Simphiwe Ntombizodwa
author_sort Sigauke, Simphiwe Ntombizodwa
collection Thesis
description It has been argued that one of the key benefits of raising the levels of education in a nation is the enhancement of trust. Trust has been found to be a critical driver of economic development and growth and is thus of particular value to South Africa. There has been rising literature, however, showing the ineffectiveness of education as a policy tool to increase trust levels. At times the impact of education has even been found to impair trust within a society. This present study sought to expand the research interrogating education as a determinant of interpersonal trust in South Africa by assessing the impact of education on various forms of trust. In this thesis, education as a determinant of trust in South Africa was assessed using the National Income Dynamics Wave 5 Cross-Sectional data set. As a primary focus, an analysis was undertaken to assess the relationship between education and trust by applying probit regression analysis in which the years of basic education obtained together with control variables was regressed against five variables of trust. In a secondary analysis, the household spillover effects of education on trust were also assessed. The results of the study suggest that an additional year of basic education increases the likelihood of trusting in respect of only two forms of trust: trust of people that an individual knows and trust of one's own race group. Basic education was found to be an insignificant determinant of the other three forms of trust. The result for trust of one's own race group was further confirmed in the spillovers analysis. Here, the results suggested that education household spillovers that impact trust are present between the household head and the other members of the household. The spillover effects of education here were found to enhance in-group trust in terms of one's own race group on the one hand and to reduce out-group trust in terms of other race groups on the other hand. Notably, however, the impact of basic education on trust observed in both the primary and secondary analysis was quite minimal. Evidence from this study therefore supports the sentiment expressed in the literature that the positive outcomes of education on trust are most certainly not universal. Rather, the nature of this relationship is variable as a consequence of a number of contextual dynamics within the society in question.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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publisher School of Economics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41336 Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa Sigauke, Simphiwe Ntombizodwa Njozela, Lindokuhle economics It has been argued that one of the key benefits of raising the levels of education in a nation is the enhancement of trust. Trust has been found to be a critical driver of economic development and growth and is thus of particular value to South Africa. There has been rising literature, however, showing the ineffectiveness of education as a policy tool to increase trust levels. At times the impact of education has even been found to impair trust within a society. This present study sought to expand the research interrogating education as a determinant of interpersonal trust in South Africa by assessing the impact of education on various forms of trust. In this thesis, education as a determinant of trust in South Africa was assessed using the National Income Dynamics Wave 5 Cross-Sectional data set. As a primary focus, an analysis was undertaken to assess the relationship between education and trust by applying probit regression analysis in which the years of basic education obtained together with control variables was regressed against five variables of trust. In a secondary analysis, the household spillover effects of education on trust were also assessed. The results of the study suggest that an additional year of basic education increases the likelihood of trusting in respect of only two forms of trust: trust of people that an individual knows and trust of one's own race group. Basic education was found to be an insignificant determinant of the other three forms of trust. The result for trust of one's own race group was further confirmed in the spillovers analysis. Here, the results suggested that education household spillovers that impact trust are present between the household head and the other members of the household. The spillover effects of education here were found to enhance in-group trust in terms of one's own race group on the one hand and to reduce out-group trust in terms of other race groups on the other hand. Notably, however, the impact of basic education on trust observed in both the primary and secondary analysis was quite minimal. Evidence from this study therefore supports the sentiment expressed in the literature that the positive outcomes of education on trust are most certainly not universal. Rather, the nature of this relationship is variable as a consequence of a number of contextual dynamics within the society in question. 2025-04-03T08:23:18Z 2025-04-03T08:23:18Z 2024 2025-04-03T08:20:50Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41336 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle economics
Sigauke, Simphiwe Ntombizodwa
Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa
title_full Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa
title_fullStr Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa
title_short Assessing education as a determinant of trust in South Africa
title_sort assessing education as a determinant of trust in south africa
topic economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41336
work_keys_str_mv AT sigaukesimphiwentombizodwa assessingeducationasadeterminantoftrustinsouthafrica