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Handbook of Regional and Urban Economics. Handbook of Regional & Urban Economics Volume 5A

  • Book

  • 722 Pages
  • May 2015
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 2986219

Developments in methodologies, agglomeration, and a range of applied issues have characterized recent advances in regional and urban studies. Volume 5 concentrates on these developments while treating traditional subjects such as housing, the costs and benefits of cities, and policy issues beyond regional inequalities. Contributors make a habit of combining theory and empirics in each chapter, guiding research amid a trend in applied economics towards structural and quasi-experimental approaches. Clearly distinguished from the New Economic Geography covered by Volume 4, these articles feature an international approach that positions recent advances within the discipline of economics and society at large.

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Table of Contents

Volume 5A Section I: Empirical Methods 1. Causal Inference in Urban EconomicsNathaniel Baum-Snow and Fernando Ferreira 2. Structural Estimation in Urban and Regional EconomicsThomas J. Holmes and Holger Sieg 3. Spatial MethodsStephen Gibbons, Henry G. Overman and Eleonora Patacchini Section II: Agglomeration and Urban Spatial Structure 4. Agglomeration TheoryKristian Behrens and Frederic Robert-Nicoud 5. The Empirics of AgglomerationPierre-Philippe Combes and Laurent Gobillon 6. Agglomeration and InnovationGerald Carlino and William Robert Kerr 7. The Role of the Amenities (Environmental and Otherwise) in Shaping CitiesMatthew Edwin Kahn and Randall Phillip Walsh 8. Urban Land UseGilles Duranton and Diego Puga 9. Neighbourhood versus Network EffectsGiorgio Topa and Yves Zenou 10. Immigration and the Economy of Cities and RegionsEthan Lewis and Giovanni Peri Volume 5B Section I: Housing and Real Estate 11. Housing BubblesEdward Glaeser and Charles G. Nathanson 12. Housing, Finance, and the MacroeconomyMorris A. Davis and Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh 13. Microstructure of Housing Markets: Search, Bargaining, and BrokerageLu Han and William Strange 14. United States Housing PoliciesEdgar Olsen and Jeffrey Zabel 15. How Mortgage Finance Affects the Urban LandscapeAndrew Haughwout, Joseph Tracy and Sewin Chan 16. Cycles and Persistence in the Economic Status of Neighborhoods and CitiesStuart Rosenthal and Stephen Ross Section II: Applied Urban Economics 17. Taxes in Cities: Interdependence, Asymmetry, and AgglomerationMarius Brulhart, Sam Bucovetsky and Kurt Schmidheiny 18. Place Based PoliciesDavid Neumark and Helen Simpson 19. Regulation and Housing SupplyJoseph Gyourko and Raven Molloy 20. Transportation Costs and the Spatial Organization of Economic ActivityStephen J. Redding and Matthew Turner 21. Cities in Developing Countries: Fueled by Rural-Urban Migration, Lacking in Tenure Security, and Short of Affordable HousingJan Brueckner and Somik Lall 22. The Geography of Development within CountriesKlaus Desmet and J. Vernon Henderson 23. Urban CrimeBrendan O'Flaherty and Rajiv Sethi

Authors

Gilles Duranton Chair, Real Estate Department, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA. Holder of the Noranda Chair in Economics and International Trade, Gilles Duranton has taught at the Paris School of Economics, Princeton University, the Universidad del Norte in Colombia, the University of Lille, and others. A consultant for the CD Howe Institute, the World Bank, and the OECD, he is President of the North American Regional Science Council and has won the Philip Leverhulme Prize, the European Investment Bank Prize, and numerous grants and fellowships. he is the co-editor of the Journal of Urban Economics. Fellow, Centre for Economic Policy Research, Fellow, Spatial Economics Research Centre, Fellow, Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis, Member of the Urban Economics Association, Faculty Fellow, Penn Institute for Urban Research. Vernon Henderson Department of Economics, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA. J. Vernon Henderson is one of the world's leading urban economists. Chair of the Urban Studies Program at Brown University, he has taught at the London School of Economics, Delhi University, Tribhuvan University in Nepal, and Queen's Univresity, Canada. Awarded a Guggenheim Foundation grant and elected a Fellow of the Regional Science Association International, he co-edited the Handbook of Regional and Urban Economics, vol. 4 with J.-F. Thisse. William Strange Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada. William Strange is co-editor of the Journal of Urban Economics and the President of the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association. Recipient of the Walter Isard Award for Distinguished Scholarly Achievements in Regional Science, he has published on a variety of subjects.