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Lin Tian
Assistant Professor of Economics
Keywords
Skill distribution; ICT; Spatial Organization
Working Paper
The authors study how the rise in cross-city joint productions (or “geographic fragmentation”)— facilitated by advancements in communication technologies—shapes the spatial skill distribution in the United States. Motivated by observations that large cities became disproportionately skill intensive and that industries more likely to fragment underwent greater increases in spatial skill dispersion between 1980 and 2013, the authors propose a spatial equilibrium model with cross-city production and heterogeneous skills to study how geographic fragmentation affects spatial skill distribution.