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Title: Why does skill intensity vary across cities? The role of housing cost

Citation Type: Journal Article

Publication Year: 2015

Abstract: The ratio of skilled (college graduate) to unskilled (non-college graduate) workers (the skill intensity ratio, SIR) varies substantially across cities and the variance in the SIR has increased significantly since 1970. Recent research finds that the ratio of skilled to unskilled worker earnings (the skilled wage ratio, SWR) also varies significantly. The income elasticity hypothesis (IEH) holds that if, as empirical evidence suggests, the income elasticity of demand for housing is significantly below unity, then the SWR should vary inversely with house prices. This implication of the IEH has been confirmed in empirical tests and leads to a further consequence of the IEH. If the SWR varies inversely with house prices, the SIR should vary directly as employers substitute more skilled workers when the SWR falls. This provides the opportunity for a new test of the IEH which is conducted here. The results strongly confirm, consistent with the IEH, that housing cost is an important determinant of variation in the SIR across cities.

Url: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166046215000678

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Broxterman, Daniel A; Yezer, Anthony M

Periodical (Full): Regional Science and Urban Economics

Issue: 1

Volume: 55

Pages: 14-27

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Housing and Segregation

Countries: United States

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