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Agglomeration Economics
Edward L. Glaeser
Conference held November 30-December 1, 2007
Published in February 2010 by University of Chicago Press
© 2010 by the National Bureau of Economic Research
More information on acquiring this book
364 pages
ISBN: 0-226-29789-6
Table of Contents
Introduction to "The Economics of Agglomeration": Edward L. Glaeser (p. 1 - 14) (bibliographic info)
1. Estimating Agglomeration Economies with History, Geology, and Worker Effects: Pierre-Philippe Combes, Gilles Duranton, Laurent Gobillon, Sébastien Roux (p. 15 - 65) (bibliographic info)
2. Dispersion in House Price and Income Growth across Markets: Facts and Theories: Joseph Gyourko, Christopher Mayer, Todd Sinai (p. 67 - 104) (bibliographic info)
3. Cities as Six-by-Six-Mile Squares: Zipf’s Law?: Thomas J. Holmes, Sanghoon Lee (p. 105 - 131) (bibliographic info)
4. Labor Pooling as a Source of Agglomeration: An Empirical Investigation: Henry G. Overman, Diego Puga (p. 133 - 150) (bibliographic info)
5. Urbanization, Agglomeration, and Coagglomeration of Service Industries: Jed Kolko (p. 151 - 180) (bibliographic info)
6. Who Benefits Whom in the Neighborhood? Demographics and Retail Product Geography: Joel Waldfogel (p. 181 - 209) (bibliographic info)
7. Understanding Agglomerations in Health Care: Katherine Baicker, Amitabh Chandra (p. 211 - 236) (bibliographic info)
8. The Agglomeration of U.S. Ethnic Inventors: William R. Kerr (p. 237 - 276) (bibliographic info)
9. Small Establishments/Big Effects: Agglomeration, Industrial Organization and Entrepreneurship: Stuart S. Rosenthal, William C. Strange (p. 277 - 302) (bibliographic info)
10. Did the Death of Distance Hurt Detroit and Help New York?: Edward L. Glaeser, Giacomo A. M. Ponzetto (p. 303 - 337) (bibliographic info)
11. New Evidence on Trends in the Cost of Urban Agglomeration: Matthew E. Kahn (p. 339 - 354) (bibliographic info)