Editor:
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Departamento de Economía
Issued date:
2018-07
ISSN:
2340-5031
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Comunidad de Madrid Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Sponsor:
Ricardo Mora gratefully acknowledges the financial support from MICIN, grant PID2019-108576RB-I00, and Comunidad de Madrid, grants EPUC3M11 (V PRICIT) and H2019/HUM-589.
Serie/No.:
UC3M Working papers. Economics 18-05
Project:
Gobierno de España. PID2019-108576RB-I00 Comunidad de Madrid.EPUC3M11 (V PRICIT) Comunidad de Madrid. H2019/HUM-589
Keywords:
Online social relations
,
Unobservable common tastes
,
Complementarity
,
Adolescence
Rights:
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
Abstract:
We use longitudinal individual data from a nationally representative sample of Chinese children aged 10 to 15 to investigate whether restrictions on internet use for social interactions affect social skills among adolescents. First, we find that (i) for most cWe use longitudinal individual data from a nationally representative sample of Chinese children aged 10 to 15 to investigate whether restrictions on internet use for social interactions affect social skills among adolescents. First, we find that (i) for most children offline and online relations are complements so that online restrictions reduce their offline social relations; (ii) these negative effects are mostly invariant to the size of the online network; and (iii) for older children they are large and statistically significant even in the absence of network effects. Second, we find that offline social relations directly affect social skills while online social relations do not. These results are consistent with the view that the majority of adolescents use online technologies to
intensify their offline social relations, which has a positive effect on their ability to socialize with others.[+][-]