Categorizing places based on their network connections to other places in the region reveals not only population concentration but also economic dynamics that are missed in other typologies. The US Office of Management and Budget categorization of counties into metropolitan/micropolitan and central/outlying is widely seen as insufficient for many analytic purposes. In this article, we use a coreness index from network analysis to identify labor market centrality of a county. We use county-to-county commute flows, including internal commuting, to identify regional hierarchies. Indicators broken down by this typology reveal counterintuitive results in many cases. Not all strong core counties have large populations or high levels of urbanizati...
This Paper examines the spatial distribution of jobs across US counties and investigates whether sec...
If economic growth elsewhere raises the individual's earning prospects relative to those in the pres...
U.S. Commuting Zones (CZs) are an aggregation of county-level data that researchers commonly use to ...
Categorizing places based on their network connections to other places in the region reveals not onl...
Labor market areas (LMAs) have long been a staple of regional and urban analysis. As commuting patte...
This paper studies the recent trends in the spatial distribution of economic activity in the United ...
I document a new empirical pattern of internal mobility in the United States. Namely, county-to-coun...
Inter-county flows of commuters have long been used by the Bureau of the Census to identify MSAs and...
We examine the effects of three broad groups of socioeconomic factors on poverty, income and employm...
The emergence in the United States of large-scale “megaregions” centered on major metropolitan area...
Using US county data, we estimate employment growth equations to analyze how the spatial distributio...
This document provides an overview of a research project that identified U.S. commuting zones and la...
In support of economic development practitioners’ efforts to devise strategies that can align with b...
In support of economic development practitioners’ efforts to devise strategies that can align with b...
This paper examines the spatial distribution of jobs across U.S. counties between 1970 and 2000, and...
This Paper examines the spatial distribution of jobs across US counties and investigates whether sec...
If economic growth elsewhere raises the individual's earning prospects relative to those in the pres...
U.S. Commuting Zones (CZs) are an aggregation of county-level data that researchers commonly use to ...
Categorizing places based on their network connections to other places in the region reveals not onl...
Labor market areas (LMAs) have long been a staple of regional and urban analysis. As commuting patte...
This paper studies the recent trends in the spatial distribution of economic activity in the United ...
I document a new empirical pattern of internal mobility in the United States. Namely, county-to-coun...
Inter-county flows of commuters have long been used by the Bureau of the Census to identify MSAs and...
We examine the effects of three broad groups of socioeconomic factors on poverty, income and employm...
The emergence in the United States of large-scale “megaregions” centered on major metropolitan area...
Using US county data, we estimate employment growth equations to analyze how the spatial distributio...
This document provides an overview of a research project that identified U.S. commuting zones and la...
In support of economic development practitioners’ efforts to devise strategies that can align with b...
In support of economic development practitioners’ efforts to devise strategies that can align with b...
This paper examines the spatial distribution of jobs across U.S. counties between 1970 and 2000, and...
This Paper examines the spatial distribution of jobs across US counties and investigates whether sec...
If economic growth elsewhere raises the individual's earning prospects relative to those in the pres...
U.S. Commuting Zones (CZs) are an aggregation of county-level data that researchers commonly use to ...