Frictional Sorting

Wenquan Liang, Ran-Hee Song, C. Timmins
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

In many countries around the world, migration costs and housing supply restrictions interact with each other and combine to restrict workers’ location decisions. Using an equilibrium sorting model and rich micro data from China, we evaluate the impacts of these dual constraints on workers’ sorting behavior and quantify the resulting changes in aggregate welfare and inequality. We find strong policy interactions between the two kinds of frictions in determining welfare losses and regional inequality. Counterfactual simulations show that lowering migration costs can increase welfare and reduce regional inequality by moving workers from unproductive inland regions to productive coastal regions in China; such welfare and regional distributional impacts depend on the elasticity of housing supply in coastal regions and vice-versa. Results highlight the policy complementarities between reducing the two kinds of frictions and have general implications for countries with different levels of constraints on mobility and housing supply.

Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
摩擦排序
在世界上许多国家,移民成本和住房供应限制相互作用,共同制约着工人的选址决策。利用均衡排序模型和中国丰富的微观数据,我们评估了这双重约束对工人排序行为的影响,并量化了由此导致的总福利和不平等的变化。我们发现,在决定福利损失和地区不平等方面,两种摩擦之间存在很强的政策相互作用。反事实模拟表明,降低迁移成本可以通过将劳动力从非生产性内陆地区转移到生产性沿海地区来增加福利和减少区域不平等;这种福利和区域分配影响取决于沿海地区住房供应的弹性,反之亦然。结果突出了减少两种摩擦之间的政策互补性,并对流动性和住房供应受到不同程度限制的国家具有普遍影响。国家经济研究局工作论文系列的机构订阅者和发展中国家的居民可以在www.nber.org免费下载本文。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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