Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity

There is a large and extensive literature examining the strength of agglomeration economies and, more generally, the determinants of spatial variations in productivity for developed countries. However, the corresponding literature for developing countries is comparatively scant. This paper contributes to filling this knowledge gap by providing estimates for city productivity premiums and different sources of agglomeration effects for 16 countries in the Latin America and Caribbean region. While two of the countries in our sample -- Brazil and Colombia -- have been considered by the literature, the remaining 14 countries have not been previously analyzed. The paper presents estimates for the region as well as comparable estimates for each country using a harmonized data set with characteristics of individual workers and features of the cities in which the workers live. In addition to examining the strength of agglomeration economies, the roles of human capital externalities and market access in explaining subnational productivity variations are assessed. The paper finds that citywide human capital externalities appear much stronger than agglomeration economies in explaining productivity variation in all the considered countries. There is considerable heterogeneity in the estimated strength of human capital externalities across countries, which could be a reflection of country differences in educational quality.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Quintero, Luis E., Roberts, Mark
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-08
Subjects:AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES, MARKET ACCESS, DEVELOPING ECONOMIES, SUBSIDIES, DIVERSIFICATION, HUMAN CAPITAL, PRODUCTIVITY, CITY PRODUCTIVITY, GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS, EXTERNALITIES, EDUCATION QUALITY, LABOR SKILLS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/819661534785390193/Explaining-spatial-variations-in-productivity-evidence-from-Latin-America-and-the-Caribbean
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30287
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spelling dig-okr-10986302872024-08-09T07:36:19Z Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity Evidence from Latin America and the Caribbean Quintero, Luis E. Roberts, Mark AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES MARKET ACCESS DEVELOPING ECONOMIES SUBSIDIES DIVERSIFICATION HUMAN CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY CITY PRODUCTIVITY GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS EXTERNALITIES EDUCATION QUALITY LABOR SKILLS There is a large and extensive literature examining the strength of agglomeration economies and, more generally, the determinants of spatial variations in productivity for developed countries. However, the corresponding literature for developing countries is comparatively scant. This paper contributes to filling this knowledge gap by providing estimates for city productivity premiums and different sources of agglomeration effects for 16 countries in the Latin America and Caribbean region. While two of the countries in our sample -- Brazil and Colombia -- have been considered by the literature, the remaining 14 countries have not been previously analyzed. The paper presents estimates for the region as well as comparable estimates for each country using a harmonized data set with characteristics of individual workers and features of the cities in which the workers live. In addition to examining the strength of agglomeration economies, the roles of human capital externalities and market access in explaining subnational productivity variations are assessed. The paper finds that citywide human capital externalities appear much stronger than agglomeration economies in explaining productivity variation in all the considered countries. There is considerable heterogeneity in the estimated strength of human capital externalities across countries, which could be a reflection of country differences in educational quality. 2018-08-23T16:27:54Z 2018-08-23T16:27:54Z 2018-08 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/819661534785390193/Explaining-spatial-variations-in-productivity-evidence-from-Latin-America-and-the-Caribbean https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30287 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8560 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
MARKET ACCESS
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
SUBSIDIES
DIVERSIFICATION
HUMAN CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
CITY PRODUCTIVITY
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
EXTERNALITIES
EDUCATION QUALITY
LABOR SKILLS
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
MARKET ACCESS
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
SUBSIDIES
DIVERSIFICATION
HUMAN CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
CITY PRODUCTIVITY
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
EXTERNALITIES
EDUCATION QUALITY
LABOR SKILLS
spellingShingle AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
MARKET ACCESS
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
SUBSIDIES
DIVERSIFICATION
HUMAN CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
CITY PRODUCTIVITY
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
EXTERNALITIES
EDUCATION QUALITY
LABOR SKILLS
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
MARKET ACCESS
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
SUBSIDIES
DIVERSIFICATION
HUMAN CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
CITY PRODUCTIVITY
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
EXTERNALITIES
EDUCATION QUALITY
LABOR SKILLS
Quintero, Luis E.
Roberts, Mark
Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity
description There is a large and extensive literature examining the strength of agglomeration economies and, more generally, the determinants of spatial variations in productivity for developed countries. However, the corresponding literature for developing countries is comparatively scant. This paper contributes to filling this knowledge gap by providing estimates for city productivity premiums and different sources of agglomeration effects for 16 countries in the Latin America and Caribbean region. While two of the countries in our sample -- Brazil and Colombia -- have been considered by the literature, the remaining 14 countries have not been previously analyzed. The paper presents estimates for the region as well as comparable estimates for each country using a harmonized data set with characteristics of individual workers and features of the cities in which the workers live. In addition to examining the strength of agglomeration economies, the roles of human capital externalities and market access in explaining subnational productivity variations are assessed. The paper finds that citywide human capital externalities appear much stronger than agglomeration economies in explaining productivity variation in all the considered countries. There is considerable heterogeneity in the estimated strength of human capital externalities across countries, which could be a reflection of country differences in educational quality.
format Working Paper
topic_facet AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
MARKET ACCESS
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
SUBSIDIES
DIVERSIFICATION
HUMAN CAPITAL
PRODUCTIVITY
CITY PRODUCTIVITY
GEOSPATIAL ECONOMICS
EXTERNALITIES
EDUCATION QUALITY
LABOR SKILLS
author Quintero, Luis E.
Roberts, Mark
author_facet Quintero, Luis E.
Roberts, Mark
author_sort Quintero, Luis E.
title Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity
title_short Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity
title_full Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity
title_fullStr Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity
title_full_unstemmed Explaining Spatial Variations in Productivity
title_sort explaining spatial variations in productivity
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-08
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/819661534785390193/Explaining-spatial-variations-in-productivity-evidence-from-Latin-America-and-the-Caribbean
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30287
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AT robertsmark explainingspatialvariationsinproductivity
AT quinteroluise evidencefromlatinamericaandthecaribbean
AT robertsmark evidencefromlatinamericaandthecaribbean
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