Despite numerous technological advances, remoteness within the United States has been increasingly associated with relatively slower economic growth. Using a spatial hedonic pricing approach, this paper assesses the relative importance of proximity to urban consumer amenities and production spillovers in explaining growth differentials in wages and housing costs across the U.S. urban hierarchy. We find that the dominant force for lower wage growth in remote nonmetropolitan and small metropolitan-area counties is increasing relative productivity disadvantages. Yet, for medium-to-large metropolitan areas, increased attractiveness to households of remoteness from even larger metropolitan areas generally contributed the most to relatively slowe...
The traditional view of cities as monocentric conglomerates of people clustered around an employment...
Scattered residential development is explained using a theoretical model of residential location in ...
Abstract The impact of job accessibility on housing prices is examined in the Buffalo and Seattle me...
Abstract: This paper presents new evidence that the U.S. spatial economy does not function as a gene...
This thesis consists of six empirically-based papers. Collectively, the papers contribute to the und...
This paper examines the causes of spatial inequalities in economic development across counties in th...
Exploiting data on tens of millions of housing transactions, we show that (1) house prices grew by l...
Standard urban economic theory predicts that house prices will decline with distance from the centra...
This dissertation consists of three papers that explore the intersection between geography and housi...
Short Abstract: Scattered residential development is explained using a theoretical model of resident...
As developed economies have shifted from producing manufacturing goods, to been producers of knowled...
The impact of job accessibility on housing prices is examined in the Buffalo and Seattle metropolita...
We propose a model of urbanization and development to explain why the price level is higher in rich ...
Nominal urban wages are typically 30% higher than wages in non-metropolitan areas. This dissertation...
We examine the relation between housing prices in an MSA and its urban economic base. We create and ...
The traditional view of cities as monocentric conglomerates of people clustered around an employment...
Scattered residential development is explained using a theoretical model of residential location in ...
Abstract The impact of job accessibility on housing prices is examined in the Buffalo and Seattle me...
Abstract: This paper presents new evidence that the U.S. spatial economy does not function as a gene...
This thesis consists of six empirically-based papers. Collectively, the papers contribute to the und...
This paper examines the causes of spatial inequalities in economic development across counties in th...
Exploiting data on tens of millions of housing transactions, we show that (1) house prices grew by l...
Standard urban economic theory predicts that house prices will decline with distance from the centra...
This dissertation consists of three papers that explore the intersection between geography and housi...
Short Abstract: Scattered residential development is explained using a theoretical model of resident...
As developed economies have shifted from producing manufacturing goods, to been producers of knowled...
The impact of job accessibility on housing prices is examined in the Buffalo and Seattle metropolita...
We propose a model of urbanization and development to explain why the price level is higher in rich ...
Nominal urban wages are typically 30% higher than wages in non-metropolitan areas. This dissertation...
We examine the relation between housing prices in an MSA and its urban economic base. We create and ...
The traditional view of cities as monocentric conglomerates of people clustered around an employment...
Scattered residential development is explained using a theoretical model of residential location in ...
Abstract The impact of job accessibility on housing prices is examined in the Buffalo and Seattle me...