Social Connections

Group of people talking in a professional workshop.

We support communities to connect and thrive.

Most of us intuitively recognise that the strength and quality of the relationships we have as individuals and communities – our social capital – matters.

Now we have evidence that connections across socio-economic divides are one of the best indicators of economic mobility, wellbeing and trust. In other words, social mobility is a question of who you know as much as what you know. A revolutionary new approach to measuring social connections can now paint a detailed picture of social capital in a place.

The RSA wants to partner with places to deploy these new insights to build social connections and cohesion to improve life outcomes. By combining new data, a global network of best practices and a hyper-local collective impact approach, we aim to ensure that every place is connected to opportunity.

At the RSA, we’ve supported social connections to drive positive societal transformation for over 270 years. We have convened individuals and organisations across disciplines, sectors, and increasingly national borders to collaborate in solving the great challenges of the age.

Our UK-based research, Revealing Social Capital, replicating research done by Professor Raj Chetty and co-authors in the United States shows clearly why ‘who you know’ matters.

Cross-class relationships are the strongest predictor of economic mobility.

In the UK, children from lower-income households who grow up in areas with lots of mixing between income groups earn more as adults – around an additional £5,000 per year – compared to children from similar backgrounds who mix less with high-income peers.

According to Chetty’s research, in the US, people from lower socio-economic groups can, by connecting with people from higher socio-economic groups, boost their lifetime incomes by as much as 20%.

Social capital key to social mobility

Unfortunately, across the US and UK, we have witnessed a troubling decline in the strength of social ties and social mobility over the past 50 years, leading to increased isolation, alienation, and an array of other social determinants of health and wealth. This decline in social capital has significant implications for individual and community wellbeing, as well as for our civic and political institutions, and society’s resilience to shocks and crises.

We believe one of the reasons for this decline is that individual and community ‘social capital’ has been largely neglected in policymaking for several decades in favour of an overemphasis on economic capital and growth as the only metric of societal success. There is an increasing focus on the depletion of our environmental capital, but less concern on the depletion of social capital.

It is time to see a step-change in encouraging approaches and practices that value and commit to stewarding social capital.

What we’re doing about it

We convene practitioners, places and policymakers to grow social connections across the UK and around the world.