“…For example, it is estimated that between 18% and 45% of jobs are found using personal contacts (Pellizzari, 2010). A significant portion of wage inequality between different groups, and the persistence of this inequality, may be due to differences in the composition of social networks (Ioannides & Soetevent, 2006;Fontaine, 2008). Understanding non-market forces governing employment and wages has been a preoccupation for economists, going back to Rees (1966), Granovetter (1973Granovetter ( , 1983 and Montgomery (1991Montgomery ( , 1992.…”