Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T10:14:00.910Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

City size, diversification, and income smoothing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Andrea Lamorgese*
Affiliation:
ECARE, Université Libre de Bruxelles and Ente “L. Einaudi” per gli Studi Monetan Bancari e Finanziari, Via Due Macelli 73, 00187Roma, Italy

Abstract

This article investigates the mechanisms by which the cities of the United States smooth out fluctuations in their income. Contributions for social security and government transfers (the government channel) take the bulk of smoothing (17 per cent), and intercity mobility ranks high: about 6 per cent of income shocks are smoothed via the choice of working in a city different from the place of residence. The empirical analysis also shows that the various channels of income smoothing operate differently according to the size and the degree of diversification of the city.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1999 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

I wish to thank Gianmarco Ottaviano, Jorge Rodrigues, Bent Sørensen, Oved Yosha and the two referees from NIESR for their valuable advice.

References

Asdrubali, P.E., Sorensen, B. and Yosha, O. (1996), ‘Channels of interstate risk-sharing: United States 1963-90’, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 111, pp. 1081–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bairoch, P. (1985), De Jéricho à Mexico. Villes et économie dans l'histoire, Gallimard.Google Scholar
Brezis, E. and Krugman, P.R. (1997), ‘Technology and the life cycle of cities’, Journal of Economic Growth, 2, pp. 139–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, D.R., and Weinstein, D.E. (1998), ‘Economic geography and regional production structure: an empirical investigation’, Staff Reports 40, Federal Reserve Bank of New York.Google Scholar
- (1999), ‘Does Tokyo matter? Increasing returns and regional productivity’, Proceedings of the conference on Lessons from Intranational Economics for International Economics.Google Scholar
Duranton, G. (1996), ‘Cumulative investment and spill-overs in the formation of technological landscapes’, mimeo.Google Scholar
Forni, M. and Paba, S. (1999), ‘Technological externalities and growth of local industries’, mimeo.Google Scholar
Fujita, M. and Thisse, J.-F. (1996), ‘Economics of agglomeration’, Journal of Japanese and International Economics, 10, pp. 339–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glaeser, E.L., Kallal, H.D., Scheinkman, J.A. and Schleifer, A. (1992), ‘Growth in the cities’, Journal of Political Economy, 100, pp. 1126–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, V., Kuncoro, A. and Turner, M. (1995), ‘Industrial development in cities’, Journal of Political Economy, 103, pp. 1067–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krugman, P. (1991a), Geography and Trade, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
- (1991b), ‘Increasing returns and economic geography’, Journal of Political Economy, 99, pp. 483–99.Google Scholar
Lamorgese, A.R. (1998), ‘Local knowledge spillovers and city growth’, ECARE w.p. no. 90-02.Google Scholar
- (1999), ‘Death and birth of a city: the myth of the (Arabian) phoenix’, mimeo.Google Scholar
Lucas, R.E. (1988), ‘On the mechanics of economic development’, Journal of Monetary Economics, 22, pp. 342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, A. (1920), Principles of Economics, London, Macmillan.Google Scholar
Martin, P. and Ottaviano, G.I. (1999), ‘Growing locations: industry localisation in a model of endogenous growth’, Economic Economic Review, 43, pp. 253–80.Google Scholar
Martin, P. and Rogers, C.-A. (1995), ‘Industrial location and public infrastructure’, Journal of International Economics, 39, pp. 335–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ottaviano, G.I. and Puga, D. (1998), ‘Agglomeration in the global economy: a survey of the ‘new economic geography”, World Economy, 21, 6, pp. 717–31.Google Scholar
Romer, P.M. (1986), ‘Increasing returns and long-run growth’, Journal of Political Economy, 94, pp. 1002–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Venables, A.J. (1996), ‘Equilibrium locations of vertically linked industries’, International Economic Review, 37, pp. 341–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar