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  • Search: subject:"search and spatial frictions"
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Year of publication
Subject
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efficiency 3 search and spatial frictions 3 city size 2 density externality 2 Regional economics 1 Regionalökonomik 1 Search theory 1 Städtischer Arbeitsmarkt 1 Suburbanisierung 1 Suburbanization 1 Suchtheorie 1 Urban labour market 1 Urbanisierung 1 Urbanization 1 urban sprawl 1
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Online availability
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Free 3
Type of publication
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Book / Working Paper 3
Type of publication (narrower categories)
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Conference Paper 1 Conference paper 1 Graue Literatur 1 Konferenzbeitrag 1 Non-commercial literature 1
Language
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English 2 Undetermined 1
Author
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Boitier, Vincent 3
Institution
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European Regional Science Association 1
Published in...
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53rd Congress of the European Regional Science Association: "Regional Integration: Europe, the Mediterranean and the World Economy", 27-31 August 2013, Palermo, Italy 1 ERSA conference papers 1
Source
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ECONIS (ZBW) 1 EconStor 1 RePEc 1
Showing 1 - 3 of 3
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The role of labor market in urban sprawl
Boitier, Vincent - 2013
A large literature underlines the fact that city sizes are heterogeneous and urban sprawl is not optimal (i.e. cities are too large). Surprisingly, we do not have a clear understanding of these two facts in urban search economics (see Zenou (2009)). Indeed, this literature systematically...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011397396
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Endogenous city size in urban search models: the case of high reallocation costs
Boitier, Vincent - European Regional Science Association - 2013
A large literature underlines the fact that city sizes are heterogeneous and urban sprawl is not optimal (i.e. cities are too large). Surprisingly, we do not have a clear understanding of these two facts in urban search economics (see Zenou (2009)). Indeed, this literature systematically...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010740328
Saved in:
Cover Image
The role of labor market in urban sprawl
Boitier, Vincent - 2013 - Version June 2013
The goal of this paper is to specify the link between urban sprawl and labor market. To this fashion, I build a urban labor model with housing consumption, with a social planer problem and where spatial allocation of workers is directed by a Nash equilibrium In the context of a Potential game....
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011554006
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