This paper argues that long-run trends in geographic segregation are inconsistent with models where residential choice depends solely on local public goods (the Tiebout hypothesis). We develop an extension of the Tiebout model that predicts as mobility costs fall, the heterogeneity across communities of individual public good preferences and of public good provision must (weakly) increase. Given the secular decline in mobility costs, these predictions can be evaluated using historical data. We find decreasing heterogeneity in policies and proxies for preferences across (i) a sample of U.S. municipalities (1870-1990); (ii) all Boston-area municipalities (1870-1990); and (iii) all U.S. counties (1850-1990).
We study the sorting of skill/income-heterogeneous consumers within and between cities. We allow for...
Ethnic and socioeconomic segregation levels vary over time and so do the spatial levels of these seg...
Abstract. We re-examine Tiebout’s hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibr...
This paper argues that long-run trends in geographic segregation are inconsistent with models where ...
In a seminal paper, Tiebout (1956) argues that a large number of small local governments will functi...
The Tiebout model implies, under certain assumptions, that communities will become increasingly homo...
The Tiebout hypothesis (residential choice depends solely on local public goods) is extensively appl...
This paper studies the dynamics by which populations with heterogeneous preferences for public good ...
An overview of our methodology and results suggests that there does exist a trend stationary pattern...
More than five decades have passed since Charles Tiebout wrote his seminal 1956 paper, often cited a...
The Tiebout Hypothesis is that individuals reveal their preferences for high or low public services...
We re-examine Tiebout's hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibrium framew...
with Tiebout arguing that fragmented settings should better match varied tastes with varied ser-vice...
The theory known as the Tiebout Hypothesis concludes that an individual or family’s decision to move...
This classroom exercise illustrates the Tiebout (1956) hypothesis that residential sorting across mu...
We study the sorting of skill/income-heterogeneous consumers within and between cities. We allow for...
Ethnic and socioeconomic segregation levels vary over time and so do the spatial levels of these seg...
Abstract. We re-examine Tiebout’s hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibr...
This paper argues that long-run trends in geographic segregation are inconsistent with models where ...
In a seminal paper, Tiebout (1956) argues that a large number of small local governments will functi...
The Tiebout model implies, under certain assumptions, that communities will become increasingly homo...
The Tiebout hypothesis (residential choice depends solely on local public goods) is extensively appl...
This paper studies the dynamics by which populations with heterogeneous preferences for public good ...
An overview of our methodology and results suggests that there does exist a trend stationary pattern...
More than five decades have passed since Charles Tiebout wrote his seminal 1956 paper, often cited a...
The Tiebout Hypothesis is that individuals reveal their preferences for high or low public services...
We re-examine Tiebout's hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibrium framew...
with Tiebout arguing that fragmented settings should better match varied tastes with varied ser-vice...
The theory known as the Tiebout Hypothesis concludes that an individual or family’s decision to move...
This classroom exercise illustrates the Tiebout (1956) hypothesis that residential sorting across mu...
We study the sorting of skill/income-heterogeneous consumers within and between cities. We allow for...
Ethnic and socioeconomic segregation levels vary over time and so do the spatial levels of these seg...
Abstract. We re-examine Tiebout’s hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibr...