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The rise of external economies in Beijing: Evidence from intra-urban wage variation

Over the past thirty years, labor market and land market liberalization in China has transformed the spatial structure of Chinese cities. This study represents the first attempt to empirically investigate the extent to which firms' location choices in a large Chinese city are influenced by the...

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Published in:Regional science and urban economics 2009-07, Vol.39 (4), p.449-459
Main Authors: Zheng, Siqi, Peiser, Richard B., Zhang, Wenzhong
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Language:English
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description Over the past thirty years, labor market and land market liberalization in China has transformed the spatial structure of Chinese cities. This study represents the first attempt to empirically investigate the extent to which firms' location choices in a large Chinese city are influenced by the tradeoff between greater external economies from adjacent employment density, on the one hand, and the higher wage cost due to longer commuting, on the other hand, as predicted by the endogenous urban structure model of Lucas and Rossi-Hansberg [Lucas, R.E. Jr. and Rossi-Hansberg, E., 2002. On the internal structure of cities. Econometrica 70, 1445–1476.]. Employing a large-scale worker survey and job density data from Beijing, we find that locations with higher adjacent job density tend to require longer commuting, and private-sector firms pay a wage premium in these locations. We also find such wage premium to be more significant for skill-intensive firms. These findings reveal the rise of agglomeration economies in Beijing that shapes its urban form evolution.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2009.01.009
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Agglomeration economies
China
Commuting
Commuting time
Economic models
External effects
Intra-urban wage variation
Job density
Labor market
Labour market
Land market
Liberalization
Location of industry
Studies
Transition economies
Urban agglomeration
Urban form
Urban form Intra-urban wage variation Job density Commuting time Agglomeration economies Transition economies
Urban structure
Wage differentials
Wages & salaries
title The rise of external economies in Beijing: Evidence from intra-urban wage variation
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