Abstract

Using IRS tax filing data, I show that social network and word-of-mouth communications play an important role in stock market participation decisions. Using a novel dataset from Facebook, I construct a measure of social network friends' participation for US counties and find that a one-percentage point increase in friends' participation increases the focal county participation by 14 to 25 basis points in the following year. For identification strategy, I employ the revelation of financial misconducts as an exogenous negative shock to local participation rate and show that the instrumented change in friend participation significantly and positively predicts the change in focal county participation rates. The increase in participation rates among the low-income households induced by friends' participation decreases the Gini coefficients in metropolitan counties in the following two years. The evidence suggests that social influences and peer effects contribute to the cross-sectional differences in the stock market participation rates across US counties and may lead to lower income inequality.

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