Tiebout\u27s (1956) model of fiscal competition suggests income sorting between jurisdictions while the Alonso (1964), Mills (167) and Muth (1969) model of the monocentric city suggests income sorting over space. However, strict income sorting is not empirically observed. We add fiscal competition to the spatial model by considering a circular inner city surrounded by a suburb. The fiscal difference between the jurisdictions and the commuting advantage of locations closer to the city center are capitalized into house prices. In addition to the traditional equilibrium with income sorting, there are equilibria with income mixing - both across jurisdictions and across space
We provide an explanation for the stylized fact that poor households are concentrated in the inner c...
Gledhill Prize in Applied EconomicsDenman Research Award (2nd place in Social Sciences)Harvard Natio...
Our paper contributes to the literature on economic segregation by showing that heterogeneity in pre...
Tiebout\u27s (1956) model of fiscal competition suggests income sorting between jurisdictions while ...
We extend de Bartolome and Ross [C.A.M. de Bartolome, S.L. Ross, Equilibrium with local governments ...
A circular metropolitan area consists of an inner city and a suburb. Households sort over the two ju...
Segregation of households on the dimension of income at the jurisdictional level is interesting to e...
We study the sorting of skill/income-heterogeneous consumers within and between cities. We allow for...
This paper presents a model of an urban area with local income taxes used to finance a local public ...
Abstract: This paper reexamine Tiebout’s hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competi-tive spatial ...
Abstract. We re-examine Tiebout’s hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibr...
This paper studies the dynamics by which populations with heterogeneous preferences for public good ...
We re-examine Tiebout's hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibrium framew...
This paper addresses the measurement of income sorting across jurisdictions and the attribution of s...
In a seminal paper, Tiebout (1956) argues that a large number of small local governments will functi...
We provide an explanation for the stylized fact that poor households are concentrated in the inner c...
Gledhill Prize in Applied EconomicsDenman Research Award (2nd place in Social Sciences)Harvard Natio...
Our paper contributes to the literature on economic segregation by showing that heterogeneity in pre...
Tiebout\u27s (1956) model of fiscal competition suggests income sorting between jurisdictions while ...
We extend de Bartolome and Ross [C.A.M. de Bartolome, S.L. Ross, Equilibrium with local governments ...
A circular metropolitan area consists of an inner city and a suburb. Households sort over the two ju...
Segregation of households on the dimension of income at the jurisdictional level is interesting to e...
We study the sorting of skill/income-heterogeneous consumers within and between cities. We allow for...
This paper presents a model of an urban area with local income taxes used to finance a local public ...
Abstract: This paper reexamine Tiebout’s hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competi-tive spatial ...
Abstract. We re-examine Tiebout’s hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibr...
This paper studies the dynamics by which populations with heterogeneous preferences for public good ...
We re-examine Tiebout's hypothesis of endogenous sorting in a competitive spatial equilibrium framew...
This paper addresses the measurement of income sorting across jurisdictions and the attribution of s...
In a seminal paper, Tiebout (1956) argues that a large number of small local governments will functi...
We provide an explanation for the stylized fact that poor households are concentrated in the inner c...
Gledhill Prize in Applied EconomicsDenman Research Award (2nd place in Social Sciences)Harvard Natio...
Our paper contributes to the literature on economic segregation by showing that heterogeneity in pre...