Working Paper: NBER ID: w29228
Authors: A. Kerem Coar; Banu Demir; Devaki Ghose; Nathaniel Young
Abstract: What is the impact on intra-national trade and regional economic outcomes when the quality and lane-capacity of an existing paved road network is expanded significantly? We investigate this question for the case of Turkey, which undertook a large-scale public investment in roads during the 2000s. Using spatially disaggregated data on road upgrades and domestic transactions, we estimate a large positive impact of reduced travel times on trade as well as local manufacturing employment and wages. A quantitative exercise using a workhorse model of spatial equilibrium implies heterogeneous effects across locations, with aggregate real income gains reaching 2-3 percent in the long-run. Reductions in travel times increased local employment-to-population ratio but had no effect on local population. We extend the model by endogenizing the labor supply decision to capture this finding. The model-implied elasticity of employment rates to travel time reductions captures about one-third of the empirical elasticity.
Keywords: road capacity; domestic trade; regional outcomes; Turkey; transport infrastructure
JEL Codes: F14; R11; R41
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
Reduced travel times due to road upgrades (R42) | Increase in domestic trade (F19) |
Reduced travel times due to road upgrades (R42) | Increase in local employment-to-population ratio (J69) |
Reduced travel times due to road upgrades (R42) | No discernible effect on local population numbers (J11) |
Improved connectivity (F12) | Aggregate welfare increase (D69) |