Job Decentralization and Residential Location

L. Boustan, R. Margo
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

How does the spatial distribution of employment opportunities influence residential location? We revisit this classic question in urban economics by exploiting a natural experiment generated by the history of state capitals. Many state employees in capital cities work in centrally located government buildings that were constructed in the nineteenth century, while state workers elsewhere mirror the decentralization of the private sector. We compare the work and residential locations of state workers in capital and non-capital cities relative to other workers in their metropolitan areas. Our results suggest that assigning 1,000 jobs to the central city would attract approximately 250 working residents to the city. Evidence from other industries with historically-determined locations, including the postal service and defense contractors, corroborates our basic finding.
工作分散与居住区位
就业机会的空间分布如何影响居住区位?我们通过利用由州首府历史产生的自然实验,重新审视城市经济学中的这个经典问题。首都城市的许多国有雇员在19世纪建造的位于市中心的政府大楼里工作,而其他地方的国有雇员则反映了私营部门的分散化。我们比较了在首都和非首都城市工作和居住的国家工作人员与在其大都市区的其他工作人员的工作和居住地点。我们的研究结果表明,在中心城市分配1000个工作岗位将吸引大约250名工作居民到城市。来自其他行业的证据,包括邮政服务和国防承包商,证实了我们的基本发现。
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