This study focuses on the relative importance of amenity and productivity differences in determining wage differentials across urban areas. The approach developed takes advantage of the connection between land and labor market clearing conditions required for locational equilibrium of households and firms. Data on recent movers are used to estimate equilibrium wages and rents for a sample of metropolitan areas. This information is then used to identify amenity and productivity components of wages for each city in the sample. Using national estimates of the relative share of land in consumption and production, differences in productivity and amenities are found to be roughly equal sources of wage variation across the sample.
We examine the location and growth of the U.S. population using county-level census data from 1840 and 1990. Counties are described by natural and produced characteristics they possessed in 1840. Natural characteristics include climate, mineral resources and access to natural transportation networks. Produced characteristics include industry mix, educational infrastructure, literacy rates, and access to man-made transportation systems. We investigate how natural characteristics influenced settlement patterns in 1840, and how natural and produced characteristics influenced population growth over the subsequent 150 years. We find that natural characteristics heavily influenced where populations located in 1840. We also that educational infrastructure, literacy rates, industry mix, and access to transportation networks had a significant influence on growth. There is little evidence of population convergence among our full sample of counties; such evidence appears only when the most-heavily-populated counties in 1840 are excluded from the sample. Moreover, when counties located on the western frontier are excluded from the full sample, on the assumption that they were relatively far from their steady state populations, there is evidence of population divergence.We thank Van Beck Hall for help identifying data sources; Carol Kraker and Steve Lehrer for research assistance; and
This paper uses a stochastic frontier production-function model to measure and compare productivity efficiency in the manufacturing sector of states in the United States over the period [1959][1960][1961][1962][1963][1964][1965][1966][1967][1968][1969][1970][1971][1972]. Based on this model we find considerable variations in productive efficiency across states. A large portion of the variation is found to be related to regional differences in labor-force characteristics, levels of urbanization and industrial structure. We also examine the relationship between productive efficiency and the subsequent growth of manufacturing and find some evidence of a weak relationship between efficiency and the growth of employment.
This paper investigates the determinants of productivity growth in the manufacturing sector of states over the period [1959][1960][1961][1962][1963][1964][1965][1966][1967][1968][1969][1970][1971][1972][1973]. Special emphasis is placed on isolating the effects of a state's urbanization characteristics on productivity growth. Urbanization characteristics considered include the spatial arrangement of cities along with the standard measures of urbanization. The results indicate that while both scale economies and technical change are related to urbanization characteristics the effects tend to be offsetting; no relationship is found between urbanization and overall productivity growth as measured by total factor productivity growth.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.