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Article

The Impact of Social Capital on Mental Health: Evidence from the China Family Panel Survey

1
School of Public Administration, Central China Normal University, Wuhan 430079, China
2
Center for Labor and Social Security Research, Central China Normal University, Wuhan 430079, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19(1), 190; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010190
Submission received: 26 October 2021 / Revised: 20 December 2021 / Accepted: 21 December 2021 / Published: 24 December 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Organizational Values and Mental Health)

Abstract

:
The influence of social capital on mental health is a controversial topic. As some studies have pointed out, cognitive social capital significantly affects mental health but structural social capital does not. Using data from the China Family Panel Survey, this study measured social capital from social help, social trust, social networks, and social participation, and took regional average level of social capital as the instrumental variables, and applied a two-stage least squares regression. We found that the mental health of residents who trust and help each other is significantly higher than that of residents without trust and mutual help. When residents’ efforts to maintain social networks increase, their mental health significantly improves. These results are robust. Furthermore, the impact of social capital on mental health was heterogeneous in terms of urbanicity, gender, age, and area. These results are helpful for making policies for promoting residents’ mental health.

1. Introduction

With the development of society, people have paid more and more attention to mental health. As a substantial body of evidence has documented, mental health is affected by factors such as the environment [1], living habits [2], medical resources [3], and experience [4]. It relies on economic development and community policies to improve mental health by increasing individual income and providing a better living environment, advocating healthy lifestyles, and promoting the rational flow of medical resources [5,6,7,8,9]. However, even though the state and society promote mental health through a variety of ways, mental illness is still severe [10]. As the China Mental Health Survey indicated, the number of Chinese people who suffer from depression reached 95 million by 2015 [11]. Thus, it is necessary to expand research on the factors influencing mental health, with a focus on social capital [12].
Originating from the field of sociology, social capital has been a great concern in public health since the 1990’s [13]; however, there is still a lack of consensus on the definition of social capital [14]. Social capital may be the resources mobilized by individuals or collectives to realize their interests [15,16]. Social capital can be also viewed as the features of family, peers, the community, school, and work [17,18,19,20]. According to the functional perspective, social capital is divided into outreach and cohesion [21]. In addition, the standard content of social capital can be divided into cognitive social capital and structural social capital [22,23,24]. Although there is no consensus on the concept and classification of social capital, there are common elements, such as formal and informal relationships, mutual assistance, trust, and social participation [17,25].
Although a lot of research has been carried out, the impact of social capital on mental health is a controversial topic. A meta-analysis showed a very small impact of social capital on mental health [26]; some studies also support these findings [22,27]. However, there is also a lot of work indicating that social capital has a significant impact on mental health [28,29,30]. Some of the literature has demonstrated the impact of social capital on the mental health of special groups, such as adolescents [31,32,33], ethnic minorities [34,35], immigrants [36,37], the aged [38,39], and the diseased population [14,40]. In addition, as the research on the specific sub dimensions of social capital has documented, cognitive social capital, cohesive social capital, and community social capital have significant impacts on residents’ mental health [21,41,42]. However, overall, most of the literature does not address the causal inference. Minority literature on the paths has indicated that social capital leads to health inequality through the social and economic inequality of individuals and families, health investment, and the interaction between individuals and their environment [43,44]. In addition, social capital may affect an individual’s mental health by influencing their attitude to life and habits [24].
There are many studies accumulated so far on the impact of social capital on mental health, but most of them do not address causal inference. This study explores the causal inference on the impact of social capital on mental health in China. The remainder of this paper is structured as follows. Section 2 contains the data, definitions, and a summary of the variables. Section 3 outlines the empirical approach. Section 4 presents the results of the two-stage least square (TSLS) regression, a robustness check, and a heterogeneity analysis. Section 5 provides a discussion. Section 6 concludes.

2. Data and Variables

The data used in this study come from the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS) conducted by the China Social Science Investigation Center at Peking University. CFPS is an ongoing longitudinal survey which started in 2010. The data are collected in interviews once every 2 years. The study is based on a permanent sample of 14,960 households and 42,590 individuals who entered information in the 2010 baseline survey. It conducts a detailed and comprehensive investigation of family income, social security participation, education, health, and individual characteristics, which makes these data suitable for the research and analysis presented here. Additionally, it has a large sample size, wide coverage, a reasonable questionnaire design, scientific survey methods, and timely data updates, effectively reflecting the development of our society.
In this study, we focused on the relationship between social capital and the mental health of adult individuals. We started with 32,669 respondents from the CFPS samples in 2018 and applied some sample restrictions. First, we deleted the respondents who were still in school at the time of the survey (4075). Secondly, in the CFPS, individuals over 17 years old are defined as adults, so we deleted samples aged 16 and under (189). Thirdly, samples with missing information for any item were also deleted (10,572). Fourthly, to obtain the instrumental variable, samples from districts with a small population size were excluded (767). After this data-screening process, we finally obtained 17066 valid samples.
The key variables are defined in the following subsections.

2.1. Mental Health

This study used the simplified Center for Epidemiological Studies—Depression (CES-D) scale to measure mental health, which has shown good reliability and validity in the previous literature [45,46,47]. Respondents were asked about the frequency of the following behaviors or feelings in the past week: (1) “I didn’t feel depressed”, (2) “I found it easy to do anything”, (3) “I slept well”, (4) “I felt happy”, (5) “I didn’t feel lonely”, (6) “I live happily”, (7) “I didn’t feel sad”, (8) “I believe life can continue”. Each question is scored from 0 (5–7 days) to 3 (less than 1 day), and we added the scores to measure mental health. Thus, the variable of mental health ranged from 0 to 24, and the higher the value, the better the individual mental health.

2.2. Social Capital

This study measures individual social capital in terms of cognitive and structural social capital. Based on existing definitions and social capital questionnaires, we selected social help and social trust as the indicators of cognitive social capital. We measured social help by asking the question “Do you think most people are willing to help others?” [14], and measured social trust by asking “Do you think most people are trustworthy?” [48,49]; both questions took 1 if the respondents thought so, and 0 otherwise. We selected social networks and social participation as the indicators of structural social capital. We measured social networks by the logarithm of gift expenditure, since, in Chinese culture, social communication is often accompanied by mutual gifting; thus, gifting expenditure can reflect the depth and breadth of individual social networks [24,50,51]. We measured social participation by the question “How many memberships do you hold in the Communist Party of China, the Communist Youth League, the Trade Union, or the Workers’ Association?”, for which the responses ranged from 0 (none of them) to 4 (all of them) [14]. The higher the value, the greater the degree of social participation.

2.3. Control Variables

Other factors, such as individual characteristics and behavior, were included. Individual characteristics included age, gender, education, income, urbanicity, marital status, medical expenditure, and job type. Individual behaviors included smoking, reading, alcoholism, taking a noon break, and exercising. In addition, family characteristics included fuel and water for cooking, per capita income, and size.
Table 1 presents the summary statistics for all those variables.

3. Empirical Approach

Following the previous literature, mental health is a continuous variable, so we used the following OLS model:
M H i = β 0 + j = 1 4 β j 1 S C j i + k = 1 17 β k 2 Control k i + ε i
where MHi is the mental health of individual i, S C j i (j = 1,2,3,4) is social trust ( S C 1 i ), social help ( S C 2 i ), social participation ( S C 3 i ), and gifting expenditure ( S C 4 i ) of individual i, respectively. Control k i (k = 1,2,...,17) is gender, age, marital status, education, job type, income, medical expenditure, noon break, smoking, alcoholism, reading, exercise, family size, family income, cooking fuel, and water of individual i, respectively, β j 1 , β k 2 are the corresponding coefficients, and ε i is the error term.
In this model, in order to reduce the errors caused by endogeneity, we also consider the social and economic characteristics of individuals and families, including gender, age, education, income, medical expenditure, family size, family income, etc., because these variables have been addressed to have significant impacts on mental health in existing studies. In addition, some studies have also found a significant relationship between living behaviors and residents’ health, so we also take it as a part of the control variable.
For this model, there may be endogeneity, mainly arising from reverse causality. Social capital may affect mental health through individual feelings and available resources. On the other hand, individuals with higher mental health are likely to participate in social interactions and overestimate their social position, and thus obtain higher social capital [52]. To solve this problem, we used an instrumental variable (IV) and two-stage least square (TSLS) regression. In particular, this study considered the average social capital level of the 223 districts as the instrumental variable. We would like to discuss the following assumptions for valid IVs [53].
Exclusion Restriction Assumption: Individual mental health is not affected by the average level of social capital of the district once individual social capital is taken into account. On the one hand, the instrumental variables in this paper, i.e., the average level of social capital of a district, is different from the community social capital in the previous literature. The existing studies have addressed the association between community social capital and individual mental health, which may lead to the violation of exclusion restriction [20,54]. The previous literature mostly measures community social capital from community belongingness, infrastructure construction, participation, support, and community-based occupations, and analyzes its impact on residents’ mental health [55,56]; little literature addressed the significant impact of individual social capital at the cluster level on mental health. On the other hand, social capital measured at the cluster level has also been used as an instrumental variable in the existing literature; for example, the research on the impact of social capital on women empowerment [57], and the impact of social security polices [58], which also supports the validity of IV at the cluster lever. Moreover, since the number of IVs is equal to the number of endogenous variables, i.e., the model is exactly identical, the instrumental variables can be considered as exogenous from the perspective of statistical methods.
Relevance Assumption: The average social capital at the cluster level of a district has a strong correlation with individual social capital. This is fulfilled since the generation shows the direct relationship between individual social capital and the instrumental variables. In order to make the IV estimation more reliable, we carried out a weak instrumental variable test in the two-stage least square regression, and as the result shown in Section 4.1, the assumption is fulfilled.
No Instrument–Outcome Confounder Assumption: There are no other confounding factors between the average level of individual social capital and mental health. As the previous literature addressed, personal and family characteristics have impacts on individual mental health, such as age, physical health, family population, income, etc. Some of these characteristics also have impacts on personal social capital, which may result in the violation. Those variables are observed, and we put them into the regression model to separate the confounding effects.
Monotonicity Assumption: There is no one who would have lower social capital if living in a district with high average social capital, but have higher social capital if living in a district with low average social capital. On the one hand, the average social capital level is generated based on individual social capital. Therefore, individuals living in a district with a higher/lower average social capital level have a greater probability of higher/lower individual social capital. On the other hand, a district with higher average social capital is more likely to have better cultural, economic, and social foundation conditions to promote the accumulation of individual social capital, and vice versa. Therefore, the IV fulfills the assumption.
We used the following TSLS model to carry out an analysis that included the endogenous variables for social capital [59,60]:
S C j i = α 1 + l = 1 4 β l 1 IV l i + k = 1 17 β k 2 C o n t r o l s k i + ε i
M H i = α + j = 1 4 β j 1 S C j i + k = 1 17 β k 2 C o n t r o l s k i + ε i
where IV l i (l = 1,2,3,4) is the average level of social trust ( IV 1 i ), social help ( IV 2 i ), social participation ( IV 3 i ), and gifting expenditure ( IV 4 i ) of the district. S C j i (j = 1,2,3,4) and Control k i (k = 1,2,...,17) have the same meanings as in Equation (1). Equation (2) estimates the relationships among the instrumental variables, the control variables, and social capital. Equation (3) estimates the impacts of social capital and other variables on mental health, considering the instrumental variables to obtain more accurate results.
In order to check the robustness of the results that we obtained through the two-step least squares (2SLS) model, we carried out two robustness checks. Firstly, we added two new variables, i.e., faith and entertainment expenditure, which may have impacts on mental health, to the basic model to observe the change in the relationship between social capital and mental health. Second, we analyzed the sample that only included individuals in the labor market to check the robustness of the impact of social capital on mental health in the alternative sample.
In addition, in order to study the heterogeneity of the impact of social capital on mental health, we also carried out heterogeneity analysis. Specifically, we conducted subgroup regression based on urbanicity, gender, age, and geographical area, and carried out permutation tests for the coefficients between groups [61].

4. Results

4.1. Regression

There was no problem of collinearity in the model (see the Appendix A for the results of the collinearity test).
Table 2 shows the OLS and IV-2SLS results for the effects of social capital on mental health. As indicated in Column 2, social trust (0.571), social help (1.002), social participation (−0.228), and gifting expenditure (0.120) have statistically significant impacts on mental health at the 1% level. Moreover, gender (0.919), age (0.007), marital status (1.028), education (0.202), medical expenditure (−0.195), smoking (−0.295), exercise (0.217), family size (0.081), per capita income (0.819), and cooking fuel (0.377) have statistically significant impacts on individual mental health at the 1% level, and individual income (0.04) and alcoholism (0.214) significantly affect mental health at the 5% level.
The IV-2SLS model in Column 3 differs from the OLS model. Social trust (1.854), social help (1.902), and gifting expenditure (0.185) have stronger impacts on mental health, while the impact of social participation on mental health is no longer significant. Additionally, gender (0.906), age (0.006), marital status (1.036), education (0.112), medical expenditure (−0.185), smoking (−0.244), alcoholism (0.165), exercise (0.16), family size (0.076), family per capita income (0.797), and cooking fuel (0.396) still have statistically significant impacts on individual mental health, but differed slightly from the results of the OLS model. In addition, individual income no longer had a significant impact on mental health in the TSLS model, and reading (−0.287) showed the opposite result.
According to the Durbin–Wu–Hausman test for endogeneity, the null hypothesis of the exogeneity of social trust, social help, gifting expenditure, and social participation is rejected at the 1% level in Column 2. Thus, it is reasonable to use the IV-2SLS model. Moreover, the value of the F-statistic of the weak IV test is 84.56, higher than the general standard of 10; thus, the instrumental variables are useful.
As shown in Table 2, individual mental health is affected by social capital, which is different from previous studies showing no or little impact of gifting expenditure and social participation on mental health.

4.2. Robustness Check

4.2.1. Adding Variables

Due to the complexity of individual mental health, the previous conclusions may be affected by missing variables. Therefore, we carried out a robustness check by adding variables. Specifically, we included the respondents’ faith and family entertainment expenditure. The faith variable took 1 if the respondent believes in God, Allah, ancestral spirits, etc., and 0 otherwise. The entertainment expenditure variable was the logarithm of household spending on entertainment.
As shown in Column 2 of Table 3, social trust (1.856) and social help (1.900) still have a statistically significant impact on mental health at the 1% level, and gifting expenditure (0.185) significantly affected mental health at the 5% level. Additionally, gender (0.91), age (0.006), marital status (1.036), education (0.112), medical expenditure (−0.185), smoking (−0.244), alcoholism (0.165), reading (−0.290), exercise (0.160), family size (0.076), per capita income (0.796), and cooking fuel (0.397) had a significant impact on mental health. In addition, individual faith and family entertainment expenditure had no significant impact on mental health.
By adding variables into the basic model, we showed that the results for the impacts of social trust, social help, and gifting expenditure on mental health are robust.

4.2.2. Alternate Sample

Individuals who are employed are more likely to accumulate social capital at a faster rate. Therefore, we excluded the respondents who had withdrawn from the labor market at the time of the survey to carry out a robustness check.
As shown in Column 3 of Table 3, 15,136 working samples were used for the regression. Social trust (2.124), social help (2.042), and gifting expenditure (0.225) still had a significant positive impact on mental health. In addition, gender (0.912), age (0.008), marital status (0.96), education (0.11), medical expenditure (−0.178), smoking (−0.230), alcoholism (0.156), reading (−0.334), family size (0.075), family per capita income (0.779), and cooking fuel (0.385) had a significant impact on mental health.
According to the alternate sample, the results showing the positive impact of social capital on mental health are robust.

4.3. Heterogeneity

4.3.1. Urbanicity

In China, urban areas are ahead of rural areas in terms of economy, culture, infrastructure construction, etc. Although the previous analysis did not find that urbanicity has an significant impact on individual mental health, there may be heterogeneity for the impact of social capital on mental health. Using China’s urbanicity system and the survey information, we divided the samples into the urban group and the rural group, with sample sizes of 3638 and 13428, respectively.
As shown in Table 4, social trust (2.244) and gifting expenditure (0.241) had a positive and significant impact on the mental health of rural residents, but had no significant impact on that of urban residents. Social participation (1.637) significantly improved the mental health of urban residents, but had no significant impact on that of rural residents. Social trust significantly improved the mental health of rural (1.879) and urban (2.493) residents. The permutation test shows that at the significance of the 1% level, the impact of social trust on the mental health of rural residents is significantly higher than that of urban residents, while the impact of social participation on the mental health of urban residents is significantly higher than that of rural residents.
In addition, education (0.196), income (0.038), smoking (−0.288), alcoholism (0.215), reading (−0.243), exercise (0.172), and cooking fuel (0.392) had a significant impact on the mental health of rural residents, but no significant impact on that of urban residents, while age (0.017) and cooking water (0.578) only significantly affected the mental health of urban residents. Additionally, marital status, medical expenditure and family income had a significant impact on the mental health of urban residents (0.863, −0.173, and 0.686, respectively) and rural residents (1.06, −0.188, and 0.759, respectively). Gender and family size significantly affected the mental health of both urban residents (0.92 and 0.09, respectively) and rural residents (0.891 and 0.072, respectively). As shown in the permutation test, age, job type, and cooking water have significantly stronger impacts on the mental health of the urban residents, while education, income, and taking a noon break have contrary impacts.

4.3.2. Gender

There has been a patriarchal ideology in Chinese culture for a long time, which has resulted in females’ weak position in daily life. There may be heterogeneity in gender for the impact of social capital on mental health. This study thus divided the sample into females and males, with a sample size of 8357 and 8691, respectively.
As shown in Table 5, social trust and social help had a significant positive impact on the mental health of females (1.818 and 1.896, respectively) and males (1.924 and 1.886, respectively). Gifting expenditure (0.302) significantly improved females’ mental health but had no significant impact on that of males. Social participation had no significant impact on the mental health of males or females. As shown in column 4, at the significance of the 10% level, the impact of social participation on men’s mental health is significantly stronger than that of women, while the impacts of other dimensions of social capital on mental health has no obvious gender heterogeneity.
Moreover, education (0.177) and exercise (0.186) significantly affected females’ mental health, but had no significant impact on that of males. Age (0.01), smoking (−0.281), and alcoholism (0.156) only had a significant impact on males’ mental health. Marital status, medical expenditure, reading, family size, per capita income, and cooking fuel had a significant impact on the mental health of males (1.243, −0.165, −0.229, 0.064, 0.75, and 0.235, respectively) and females (0.669, −0.207, −0.393, 0.088, 0.889, and 0.568, respectively). In addition, age and marital status have significantly stronger impacts on men’s mental health than they do on women, while education, medical expenditure and cooking fuel have the opposite impacts.

4.3.3. Age

Individuals at different life stages have different conditions, both physically and psychologically. Thus, there may be heterogeneity in terms of age for the impact of social capital on mental health. According to the standards of the United Nations, we defined those aged 17–44 years as the young group, those aged 45–59 years as the middle-aged group, and those over 60 years old as the older group, with sample sizes of 6957, 6278, and 3831, respectively.
As shown in Table 6, social trust has a significant impact on the mental health of young people (1.816), middle-aged people (2.025), and older people (1.587). Social help has a significant impact on the mental health of young people (2.305) and middle-aged people (1.736), but has no significant impact on that of older people. Social participation only significantly improved the mental health of middle-aged people (0.357), but had no significant impact on that of other groups. Moreover, we find that the impact of social help on the mental health of young people is significantly stronger than that of middle-aged people, while social participation is on the contrary. The impact of gifting expenditure on the mental health of middle-aged people is significantly stronger than that of young people; meanwhile, that of the young people is significantly stronger than that of the older people.
In addition, individual income (0.064) only has an significant impact on the mental health of the middle-aged group, while education (0.202) and alcoholism (0.383) only significantly affect the mental health of older people. Smoking and reading significantly affect the mental health of young people (−0.355 and −0.258, respectively) and middle-aged people (−0.280 and −0.547, respectively). Gender (0.827, 1.013, and 0.897, respectively), marital status (0.924, 1.334, and 0.931, respectively), medical expenditure (−0.179, −0.21, and −0.139, respectively), noon break (−0.179, −0.210, and −0.139, respectively), family size (0.055, 0.082, and 0.085, respectively), family income (0.836, 0.781, and 0.73, respectively), and cooking fuel (0.41, 0.416, and 0.365, respectively) have significant impacts on mental health in all age groups. The impacts of marital status on the mental health of middle-aged people is significantly stronger than that of the older people, and that of the latter is significantly stronger than that of young people. The effect of education on the mental health of middle-aged people is significantly weaker than that of young and older people, and the impact of job type on mental health of the older people is significantly stronger than that of the young and the middle-aged people. Additionally, the impacts of family income and cooking fuel on the mental health of young people are significantly higher than that of middle-aged people.

4.3.4. Geographic Location

China’s development has produced gaps between geographic locations. Briefly, the provinces along the eastern coast precede other provinces. Therefore, to analyze the heterogeneity by geographic location of the impact of social capital on mental health, we defined the samples from Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, Shandong, Zhejiang, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Fujian, Guangdong, and Hainan as the eastern group; the samples from Shanxi, Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, and Anhui as the middle group; the samples from Heilongjiang, Liaoning, and Jilin as the northeast group; and the samples from Chongqing, Sichuan, Guangxi, Guizhou, Yunnan, Shaanxi, Gansu, Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Xinjiang, Qinghai, and Tibet as the western group, with sample sizes of 5401, 4094, 2284, and 5287, respectively.
As shown in Table 7, social trust had a significant positive impact on the mental health of the eastern group (2.564) and the middle group (3.149). Social help has a significant impact on the middle group (2.811), the northeast group (2.210), and the western group (2.146). In addition, the impact of social trust on the mental health of residents in the east is significantly stronger than that of the northeast residents, while that of residents in the west is significantly lower than that in other geographic locations. The impact of social help on the mental health of residents in the northeast is significantly stronger than that of residents in the west. The impact of gifting expenditure on the mental health of residents in the east is significantly stronger than that of the middle, and that of the residents in the west is significantly stronger than that in the northeast. The promotion effect of social participation on the mental health of residents in the northeast is significantly stronger than that in the east and west. Meanwhile, that of the residents in the middle is stronger than that in the west.
In addition, gender and marital status had significant impacts on the mental health of all groups, while other variables had different significant impacts on some groups (see Table 7 for details). The impacts of age, marital status, urbanicity, education, job type, medical expenditure, smoking, reading, family income, cooking fuel, and water on mental health shows heterogeneity in geographic location (see Table 8 for details).

5. Discussion

To our knowledge, this study has expanded the research on the impact of social capital on mental health in a large representative sample covering the whole of China, in particular the causal inference for the impact of social capital on mental health. Our results support the important impact of social capital on mental health, which will help to formulate social policies to promote residents’ mental health.
To solve the problem of endogeneity in the model, we established the average level of social capital of a district as the instrumental variable and applied the two-stage least squares (2SLS) method. We found that social capital significantly improved residents’ mental health. Specifically, cognitive social capital, measured as social trust and social help, had a significant positive impact on individuals’ mental health. However, the impact of structural social capital on mental health varied across different dimensions. Social networks, measured by gifting expenditure, had a significant impact on individuals’ mental health, but social participation had no significant impact. We checked that these results were robust by using additional variables and alternative samples. These findings have policy and intervention implications. Social capital can be used as one of the tools to improve residents’ mental health. Specifically, community health policies should pay more attention to improving cognitive social capital, and encourage residents to establish mutual aid organizations, such as women’s federations, elderly associations, volunteer associations, etc. In addition, it is necessary to enhance the interaction between community residents, families, residents and village (neighborhood) committee cadres, for example, family fellowship activities, and meetings between civil servants and residents, to improve residents’ sense of trust and mutual help. For structural social capital, community policies should be biased towards family cultural guidance and community infrastructure construction to encourage individuals to expand social networks reasonably.
Another main contribution of this study is that we found heterogeneity in the impact of social capital on individual mental health by urbanicity, gender, age, and geographic location, which indicates that different health promotion policies should be implemented for different groups. For almost all groups, mental health is significantly and positively affected by social capital, which indicates that social capital can be used as an effective tool to improve the mental health of different groups based on subdimensions of social capital and group characteristics.
In addition, we also found that gender, age, education, marital status, alcoholism, exercise, family size, family per capita income, and cooking fuel had significantly positive effects on individuals’ mental health, while medical expenditure, smoking, and reading had opposite significant impacts. These findings suggest that individual and family-based mental health promotion policies are still necessary. Mental health monitoring and guarantee policies for women, young people, unmarried people, people with a low education level, and people with physical limitations need to be strengthened. Meanwhile, through the promotion of culture and a community environment, policies can guide residents to form good living habits, gradually transferring the functions of mutual assistance and belonging from the family to the community.
There are some open problems following this study. First, following Arezzo et al. [62], Fiorillo [25], Phyllis [57], Fang [38], Sun and Lu [14], and Kilian et al. [30], we used cross-sectional data for causal inference. See, for example, Reichenheim et al. [63], for the conditions for causal inference with cross-sectional data. Indeed, at least one theoretical analysis for causal inference with cross-sectional data is important in future research. Second, this research mainly studied the existence of the impact of social capital on mental health, and introducing intermediary variables and regulatory variables to analyze the paths will be an important direction in future research.

6. Conclusions

Based on the CFPS 2018 data, this study applied the IV-2SLS method to analyze the impact of social capital on mental health and carried out robustness checks and heterogeneity analyses. We found that social trust, social help, and social networks (gifting expenditure) had significant positive impacts on individuals’ mental health, and these impacts are different due to the differences in the subdimensions of social capital and group characteristics. The findings indicate that social capital should be given more attention when formulating mental health-promotion policies. Future work should be carried out to clarify the impact mechanism and the path of social capital on mental health.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, X.D. and N.G.; methodology, X.D.; validation, N.G.; formal analysis, N.G.; investigation, X.D. and N.G.; writing—original draft preparation, N.G.; writing—review and editing, X.D.; supervision, X.D.; project administration, X.D.; funding acquisition, X.D. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported in part by the Humanities and Social Science Research Fund of the Ministry of Education in China (grant number: 18YJA790018), in part by the Fundamental Research Funds of the Central Universities (grant number: CCNU19TS047), and in part by the Philosophical and Social Science Research Key Fund of the Department of Education in Hubei Province (grant number: 17ZD018) to X. Dai.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Ethical review and approval were waived for this study due to publically open data from the China Family Panel Survey.

Informed Consent Statement

Patient consent was waived due to publically open data from the China Family Panel Survey.

Data Availability Statement

Data used in this paper can be found from the China Family Panel Survey, http://www.isss.pku.edu.cn/cfps/ (accessed on 24 December 2021).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

The collinearity between variables may increase the regression error. This research carried out a collinearity test before the regression analysis. Tolerance and VIF values are the usual measures of collinearity. In general, the value of tolerance is between 0 and 1. The smaller the tolerance, the larger the VIF value and the more obvious the collinearity. When the VIF value is less than 10, there is no obvious collinearity in the regression model.
As shown in Table A1, gender had the highest VIF value (2.58) and the lowest tolerance (0.387), and noon break had the lowest VIF value (1.04) and the highest tolerance (0.961). All the VIF values of all variables in this model were less than 10 and the tolerances were close to 1. There is, therefore, no collinearity in this model.
Table A1. Collinearity.
Table A1. Collinearity.
VariableVIFTolerance
Social Trust1.1900.841
Social Help1.1700.852
Gifting Expenditure1.1500.873
Social Participation1.0800.927
Gender2.5800.387
Age1.7700.565
Marital Status1.1300.888
Urbanicity1.4200.705
Education2.0900.479
Job Type2.1800.460
Income1.7800.561
Medical Expenditure1.0700.935
Noon Break1.0400.961
Smoking2.4500.408
Alcoholism1.1700.854
Reading1.3100.762
Exercise1.0900.921
Family Size1.1500.867
Family Income1.5200.658
Cooking Fuel1.2800.782
Cooking Water1.1300.888
Mean1.4600.750
N17,066
Note: Based on CFPS 2018.

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Table 1. Summary statistics.
Table 1. Summary statistics.
Variable and ValueDefinitionN/Mean%/Std
Mental HealthSummation of CES-D18.3410.993
Social TrustDo you think most people are trustworthy?
0No770745.2
1Yes935954.8
Social HelpDo you think most people are willing to help others?
0No533731.3
1Yes11,72968.7
Social ParticipationHow many memberships do you hold in the Communist Party of China, the Communist Youth League, the Trade Union, or the Workers’ Association?
0None of them12,85475.3
1One of them371621.8
2Two of them4392.6
3Three of them510.3
4All of them60.03
Gifting ExpenditureLogarithm of gifting expenditure3.2100.993
GenderGender of respondents0.5110.500
0Female837549.1
1Male869150.9
AgeAge of the respondents47.35314.218
Marital statusWhat is your marital status?
0In a relationship242414.2
1Not in a relationship14,64285.8
UrbanicityWhat is your urbanicity?
0Rural13,42878.7
1Urban363821.3
EducationWhat is your education level?
1Illiterate400023.4
2Primary school382422.4
3Junior middle school508229.8
4High school228229.8
5Junior college183310.7
6College and above450.3
Job typeWhat is the nature of your job?
0Agricultural810547.5
1Non-agricultural896152.5
IncomeLogarithm of individual income2.6012.052
Medical ExpenditureLogarithm of medical expenditure4.7903.463
Noon BreakDo you take a noon break?
0No793646.5
1Yes913053.5
SmokingDo you smoke?
0No961856.4
1Yes744843.6
AlcoholismHave you been drunk more than three times in the past week?
0No14,21783.3
1Yes284916.7
ReadingDo you read books, magazines, newspapers, and so on?
0No13,35178.2
1Yes371521.8
ExerciseDo you exercise for more than an hour a day?
0No828754.4
1Yes777945.6
Family SizeNumber of people in the family 4.2912.042
Family IncomeLogarithm of per capita income of the household4.1500.452
Cooking FuelWhat kind of fuel does your family use for cooking?
0Firewood or coal528130.9
1Gas, natural gas, solar, biogas, or electricity11,78569.1
Cooking WaterWhat kind of water does your family use for cooking?
0River and lake water, well water, rainwater, cistern water, or pond water473227.7
1Tap water or bottled water12,33472.3
Note: Based on CFPS 2018. The table reports the frequency and percentage for binary variables, and the mean and standard deviation for continuous variables.
Table 2. Regression results.
Table 2. Regression results.
Variables(1)(2)
OLSTSLS
Social Trust0.571 ***1.854 ***
(0.063)(0.398)
Social Help1.002 ***1.902 ***
(0.067)(0.423)
Gifting Expenditure0.120 ***0.185 **
(0.030)(0.085)
Social Participation−0.126 ***0.111
(0.059)(0.422)
Gender0.919 ***0.906 ***
(0.092)(0.097)
Age0.007 ***0.006 **
(0.003)(0.003)
Marital Status1.028 ***1.036 ***
(0.087)(0.102)
Urbanicity0.0380.042
(0.083)(0.102)
Education0.202 ***0.112 **
(0.032)(0.051)
Job Type0.0460.094
(0.085)(0.088)
Income0.040 **0.027
(0.019)(0.020)
Medical Expenditure−0.195 ***−0.185 ***
(0.009)(0.009)
Noon Break0.0630.041
(0.059)(0.061)
Smoking−0.295 ***−0.244 **
(0.091)(0.095)
Alcoholism0.214 **0.165 *
(0.083)(0.087)
Reading−0.094−0.287 ***
(0.080)(0.100)
Exercise0.217 ***0.160 **
(0.060)(0.069)
Family Size0.081 ***0.076 ***
(0.015)(0.016)
Family Income0.819 ***0.797 ***
(0.078)(0.090)
Cooking Fuel0.377 ***0.396 ***
(0.070)(0.073)
Cooking Water0.0910.053
(0.068)(0.071)
Constant11.460 ***10.310 ***
(0.365)(0.459)
Endogeneity Test (p-value) 0.000
Weak IV Test (F-statistics) 84.560
N17,06617,066
R20.1180.069
Note: Based on CFPS 2018.The betas are reported on the same line as the variable name, and robust standard errors are shown in parentheses. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 3. Robustness check.
Table 3. Robustness check.
Variables(1)(2)
Social Trust1.856 ***2.124 ***
(0.398)(0.446)
Social Help1.900 ***2.042 ***
(0.423)(0.470)
Gifting Expenditure0.185 **0.225 *
(0.085)(0.090)
Social Participation0.120−0.011
(0.423)(0.432)
Gender0.910 ***0.912 ***
(0.097)(0.102)
Age0.006 **0.008 *
(0.003)(0.003)
Marital Status1.036 ***0.960 ***
(0.102)(0.108)
Urbanicity0.040−0.013
(0.102)(0.112)
Education0.112 **0.110 *
(0.051)(0.054)
Job Type0.0940.063
(0.088)(0.097)
Income0.0270.032
(0.020)(0.022)
Medical Expenditure−0.185 ***−0.178 ***
(0.009)(0.010)
Noon Break0.0410.020
(0.061)(0.065)
Smoking−0.244 **−0.230 *
(0.095)(0.100)
Alcoholism0.165 *0.156 *
(0.087)(0.091)
Reading−0.290 ***−0.334 ***
(0.100)(0.106)
Exercise0.160 **0.149 *
(0.069)(0.073)
Family Size0.076 ***0.075 ***
(0.016)(0.017)
Family Income0.796***0.779 ***
(0.090)(0.098)
Cooking Fuel0.397 ***0.385 ***
(0.073)(0.077)
Cooking Water0.0520.026
(0.071)(0.075)
Faith−0.027
(0.070)
Entertainment Expenditure0.011
(0.010)
Constant10.320 ***10.090 ***
(0.461)(0.510)
N17,06615,136
R20.0690.042
Note: Based on CFPS 2018. The betas are reported on the same line as the variable name, and robust standard errors are shown in parentheses. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 4. Heterogeneity by urbanicity.
Table 4. Heterogeneity by urbanicity.
VariablesRuralUrbanPermutation Test
Social Trust2.244 ***−0.3580.008 ***
(0.442)(0.982)
Social Help1.879 ***2.493 **0.297
(0.472)(1.008)
Gifting Expenditure0.241 **−0.0070.113
(0.097)(0.183)
Social Participation−0.6651.637 **0.010 ***
(0.526)(0.731)
Gender0.891 ***0.920 ***0.444
(0.115)(0.187)
Age0.0030.017 ***0.025 **
(0.003)(0.007)
Marital Status1.060 ***0.863 ***0.218
(0.122)(0.202)
Education0.196 ***−0.0910.011 **
(0.056)(0.124)
Job Type0.0230.3650.063 *
(0.099)(0.235)
Income0.038 *−0.0310.081 *
(0.022)(0.056)
Medical Expenditure−0.188 ***−0.173 ***0.236
(0.011)(0.018)
Noon Break0.105−0.2010.026 **
(0.071)(0.129)
Smoking−0.288 **−0.2760.471
(0.112)(0.188)
Alcoholism0.215 **−0.0180.152
(0.102)(0.175)
Reading−0.243 **−0.1710.377
(0.120)(0.179)
Exercise 0.172 **0.1760.467
(0.080)(0.147)
Family Size0.072 ***0.090 **0.320
(0.018)(0.039)
Family Income0.759 ***0.686 ***0.401
(0.102)(0.208)
Cooking Fuel0.392 ***0.2810.254
(0.078)(0.254)
Cooking Water0.0200.578 **0.002 ***
(0.076)(0.259)
Constant10.220 ***11.620 ***0.140
(0.521)(1.136)
N13,4283638
R20.0410.016
Note: Based on CFPS 2018. The betas are reported on the same line as the variable name, and robust standard errors are shown in parentheses. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1. Column 4 reports the p-value of the Permutation test.
Table 5. Heterogeneity by gender.
Table 5. Heterogeneity by gender.
VariablesFemaleMalePermutation Test
Social Trust1.818 ***1.924 ***0.451
(0.561)(0.561)
Social Help1.896 ***1.886 ***0.461
(0.609)(0.591)
Gifting Expenditure−0.3800.5140.147
(0.653)(0.558)
Social Participation0.302 **0.0650.079 *
(0.124)(0.116)
Age−0.0020.010 ***0.026 **
(0.004)(0.004)
Marital Status0.669 ***1.243 ***0.004 ***
(0.169)(0.132)
Urbanicity−0.0780.1270.150
(0.138)(0.149)
Education0.177 **0.0080.045 **
(0.074)(0.070)
Job Type0.0710.0920.451
(0.135)(0.116)
Income0.0290.0270.499
(0.032)(0.027)
Medical Expenditure−0.207 ***−0.165 ***0.007 ***
(0.014)(0.012)
Noon Break0.105−0.0470.108
(0.089)(0.085)
Smoking−0.214−0.281 ***0.322
(0.199)(0.108)
Alcoholism0.2830.156*0.227
(0.243)(0.093)
Reading−0.393 **−0.229 *0.175
(0.157)(0.129)
Exercise0.186 *0.1450.401
(0.098)(0.098)
Family Size0.088 ***0.064 ***0.223
(0.023)(0.022)
Family Income0.889 ***0.750 ***0.255
(0.132)(0.124)
Cooking Fuel0.568 ***0.235 **0.017 **
(0.106)(0.099)
Cooking Water0.0390.1030.392
(0.103)(0.097)
Constant10.170 ***11.690 ***0.066*
(0.702)(0.605)
N83758691
R20.0700.037
Note: Based on CFPS 2018. The betas are reported on the same line as the variable name, and robust standard errors are shown in parentheses. Column 4 reports the p-value of the Permutation test. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 6. Heterogeneity by age.
Table 6. Heterogeneity by age.
VariablesYoungMiddle-AgedOlderYoung and OlderYoung and Middle-AgedMiddle-Aged and Older
Social Trust1.816 ***2.025 ***1.587 **0.1370.3430.192
(0.644)(0.667)(0.805)
Social Help2.305 ***1.736 **1.3210.3640.078 *0.191
(0.647)(0.720)(0.923)
Gifting Expenditure0.2340.591−0.6070.053 *0.063 *0.386
(0.700)(0.664)(0.850)
Social Participation0.0690.357 ***0.0440.1190.024 *0.376
(0.143)(0.133)(0.173)
Gender0.827 ***1.013 ***0.897 ***0.2340.3300.336
(0.150)(0.160)(0.207)
Urbanicity0.1050.0170.1130.2600.1340.370
(0.163)(0.165)(0.215)
Marital Status0.924 ***1.334 ***0.931 ***0.028 **0.4030.046 **
(0.162)(0.160)(0.205)
Education0.0880.0010.202 **0.4600.038 **0.056 *
(0.076)(0.083)(0.096)
Job Type−0.0900.0790.2270.095 *0.4110.063 *
(0.134)(0.142)(0.176)
Income0.0110.064 *0.0050.3740.4820.400
(0.032)(0.034)(0.042)
Medical Expenditure−0.179 ***−0.210 ***−0.139 ***0.4580.3730.394
(0.015)(0.015)(0.019)
Noon Break−0.179 ***−0.210 ***−0.139 ***0.3620.4550.306
(0.015)(0.015)(0.019)
Smoking−0.355 **−0.280 *0.02470.2160.4040.269
(0.146)(0.157)(0.207)
Alcoholism0.1890.0420.383 **0.4060.1420.115
(0.136)(0.146)(0.188)
Reading−0.258 *−0.547 ***−0.0070.1530.1330.494
(0.157)(0.164)(0.202)
Exercise0.1750.1790.1830.1170.1630.365
(0.107)(0.113)(0.146)
Family Size0.055 **0.082 ***0.085 ***0.087 *0.4260.128
(0.025)(0.027)(0.032)
Family Income0.836 ***0.781 ***0.730 ***0.2750.076 *0.251
(0.146)(0.144)(0.192)
Cooking Fuel0.410 ***0.416 ***0.365 **0.4570.2070.203
(0.113)(0.122)(0.151)
Cooking Water0.043−0.0930.303 **0.1520.003 ***0.141
(0.112)(0.118)(0.147)
Constant10.920 ***10.150 ***11.300 ***0.2580.2000.470
(0.661)(0.688)(0.921)
N695762783831
R20.0520.0730.090
Note: Based on CFPS 2018. The betas are reported on the same line as the variable name, and robust standard errors are shown in parentheses. Columns 4–6 reports the p-value of the permutation test. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 7. Heterogeneity by geographic location.
Table 7. Heterogeneity by geographic location.
VariablesEasternMiddleNortheastWest
Social Trust2.564 ***3.149 ***0.7840.831
(0.851)(0.919)(0.990)(0.623)
Social Help0.9422.811 ***2.210 *2.146 ***
(0.798)(0.926)(1.279)(0.711)
Gifting Expenditure0.394−0.5680.0050.325
(0.774)(1.004)(1.133)(0.710)
Social Participation0.1420.1890.2570.177
(0.152)(0.192)(0.228)(0.150)
Gender0.928 ***0.777 ***0.828 ***1.073 ***
(0.174)(0.214)(0.248)(0.178)
Age0.0020.013 **−0.0030.010 *
(0.005)(0.006)(0.008)(0.005)
Marital Status1.089 ***1.104 ***1.251 ***0.874 ***
(0.184)(0.234)(0.285)(0.174)
Urbanicity−0.0840.205−0.2950.193
(0.165)(0.246)(0.292)(0.185)
Education0.0840.0810.2070.113
(0.095)(0.125)(0.131)(0.084)
Job Type0.285*0.431 **−0.268−0.177
(0.161)(0.194)(0.233)(0.160)
Income0.002−0.0370.0550.072 **
(0.038)(0.047)(0.055)(0.036)
Medical Expenditure−0.168 ***−0.175 ***−0.208 ***−0.198 ***
(0.016)(0.021)(0.026)(0.016)
Noon Break0.082−0.0270.0600.044
(0.109)(0.136)(0.165)(0.110)
Smoking−0.568 ***−0.159−0.053−0.129
(0.170)(0.207)(0.245)(0.176)
Alcoholism0.0990.2880.1620.126
(0.153)(0.194)(0.242)(0.156)
Reading−0.492 ***−0.203−0.393−0.076
(0.171)(0.215)(0.331)(0.176)
Exercise0.1020.1950.385 **0.097
(0.124)(0.153)(0.169)(0.127)
Family Size0.051 *0.103 ***0.0540.091 ***
(0.028)(0.035)(0.045)(0.029)
Family Income0.586 ***1.202 ***0.884 ***0.685 ***
(0.167)(0.210)(0.244)(0.155)
Cooking Fuel0.442 ***0.322 **0.2700.502 ***
(0.128)(0.160)(0.196)(0.132)
Cooking Water0.0180.179−0.017−0.001
(0.125)(0.162)(0.191)(0.127)
Constant12.04 ***7.012 ***10.37 ***10.85 ***
(0.862)(1.069)(1.156)(0.789)
N5401409422845287
R20.043 0.1070.090
Note: Based on CFPS 2018. The betas are reported on the same line as the variable name, and robust standard errors are shown in parentheses. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1. The R2 of the 2SLS results for the middle-area samples is negative, so they have been omitted, and we obtained more accurate regression coefficients.
Table 8. Permutation test.
Table 8. Permutation test.
VariablesEast–NortheastEast–MiddleEast–WestMiddle–NortheastMiddle–WestNortheast–West
Social Trust0.077 *0.3350.043 **0.032 **0.4420.029 **
Social Help0.3910.1150.1390.2190.1190.023 **
Gifting Expenditure0.3440.012 **0.5000.082 *0.3470.048 **
Social Participation0.020 **0.1690.4500.2730.005 ***0.008 ***
Gender0.4950.1130.3020.1690.1730.435
Age0.061 *0.4670.1530.1050.000 ***0.069 *
Marital Status0.4660.4050.2070.4080.026 **0.039 **
Urbanicity0.3240.3170.1360.1990.065 *0.125
Education0.1820.021 **0.4300.1990.2760.308
Job Type0.068 *0.1060.022 **0.3230.1820.103
Income0.4310.1480.079 *0.1990.2850.336
Medical Expenditure0.002 ***0.4130.1090.004 ***0.098 *0.074 *
Noon Break0.4960.4100.4140.4230.2390.183
Smoking0.4080.4740.026 **0.3600.4530.322
Alcoholism0.3390.2240.4620.1540.4470.118
Reading0.035 **0.3670.036 **0.038 **0.043 **0.471
Exercise0.3090.2300.4890.4420.2750.326
Family Size0.4690.3470.1430.3360.3640.463
Family Income0.2410.4020.3370.3550.031 **0.026 **
Cooking Fuel0.1720.086 *0.3810.4320.031 **0.057 *
Cooking Water0.059 *0.053 *0.4730.3470.038 **0.096 *
Constant0.029 **0.1350.1780.1900.1220.409
Note: Based on CFPS 2018. The numbers are the p-value of the permutation test. *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
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Dai, X.; Gu, N. The Impact of Social Capital on Mental Health: Evidence from the China Family Panel Survey. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 190. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010190

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Dai X, Gu N. The Impact of Social Capital on Mental Health: Evidence from the China Family Panel Survey. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(1):190. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010190

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Dai, Xianhua, and Nian Gu. 2022. "The Impact of Social Capital on Mental Health: Evidence from the China Family Panel Survey" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 1: 190. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010190

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