2019
DOI: 10.1111/rurd.12100
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Human Capital and Urban Growth in Italy, 1981–2001

Abstract: Over the last decades of the XX century, human capital has emerged as a critical source of agglomeration economies fueling urban growth in advanced economies. Focusing on the Italian case, this paper assesses the contribution of human capital to urban growth, the latter gauged by employment growth between 1981 and 2001. A 10% higher share of college‐educated residents prompted a higher growth in employment in the 0.5–2.2% range. These results hold controlling for a wide set of urban characteristics and using a… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, understanding the reasons underlying this population decline in cities as well as their consequences becomes increasingly important, because when people are lost, not only does the level of economic activity in a city reduce, but also the amount of available social capital (Kooiman, Latten, & Bontje, 2018;Giffoni, Gomellini, & Pellegrino, 2019). This capital becomes more important when the capacity of local governments to deal with this population loss also declines (Panagopoulos et al, 2015;Mallach, 2017;Pallagst, Fleschurz, & Said, 2017;Galster, 2019;Park & LaFrombois, 2019;Sousa, 2019).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, understanding the reasons underlying this population decline in cities as well as their consequences becomes increasingly important, because when people are lost, not only does the level of economic activity in a city reduce, but also the amount of available social capital (Kooiman, Latten, & Bontje, 2018;Giffoni, Gomellini, & Pellegrino, 2019). This capital becomes more important when the capacity of local governments to deal with this population loss also declines (Panagopoulos et al, 2015;Mallach, 2017;Pallagst, Fleschurz, & Said, 2017;Galster, 2019;Park & LaFrombois, 2019;Sousa, 2019).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Migration costs also play a role in determining the direction of the selectivity. Studies in the urban literature document the existence of agglomeration effects for urban areas, resulting in higher firms' productivity, better wages, increased innovation capacity and consequently higher growth (Di Giacinto et al 2018;Giffoni et al 2017;Lamorgese and Petrella 2018). Similarly, higher average wages may increase the cost of living (rents, in particular).…”
Section: Self-selection Of Urban Moversmentioning
confidence: 99%