Cognitive Hubs and Spatial Redistribution

Working Paper: NBER ID: w26267

Authors: Esteban Rossi-Hansberg; Pierre-Daniel Sarte; Felipe Schwartzman

Abstract: In the U.S., cognitive non-routine (CNR) occupations associated with higher wages are disproportionately represented in larger cities. To study the allocation of workers across cities, we propose and quantify a spatial equilibrium model with multiple industries that employ CNR and alternative (non-CNR) occupations. Productivity is city-industry-occupation specific and partly determined by externalities across local workers. We estimate that the productivity of CNR workers in a city depends significantly on both its share of CNR workers and total employment. Together with heterogeneous preferences for locations, these externalities imply equilibrium allocations that are not efficient. An optimal policy that benefits workers equally across occupations incentivizes the formation of cognitive hubs, leading to larger fractions of CNR workers in some of today's largest cities. At the same time, these cities become smaller to mitigate congestion effects while cities that are initially small increase in size. Large and small cities end up expanding industries in which they already concentrate, while medium-size cities tend to diversify across industries. The optimal allocation thus features transfers to non-CNR workers who move from large to small cities consistent with the implied change in the industrial composition landscape. Finally, we show that the optimal policy reinforces equilibrium trends observed since 1980. However, these trends were in part driven by low growth in real-estate productivity in CNR-abundant cities that reduced welfare.

Keywords: Cognitive Nonroutine Occupations; Spatial Equilibrium; Urban Externalities

JEL Codes: E23; E24; H23; H71; J61; R13; R23


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Optimal policies (C61)Increase the fraction of cognitive nonroutine (cnr) workers in large cities (R23)
Spatial redistribution policies (R28)Improve overall welfare (I31)
Larger cities with a higher fraction of cognitive nonroutine (cnr) workers (R23)Enhanced productivity of workers (J24)
Higher shares of cognitive nonroutine (cnr) workers (J29)Increased productivity of cnr workers (O49)

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