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Determinants of Income Growth in Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Labor Markets
Authors:George W  Hammond and Eric C  Thompson
Institution:George W. Hammond is Associate Director, BBER and Associate Professor of Economics, Department of Economics and Bureau of Business and Economic Research, West Virginia University;Eric C. Thompson is Director, BBR and Associate Professor of Economics, Department of Economics and Bureau of Business Research, University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
Abstract:This article analyzes determinants of growth across labor markets in the United States, using a production function approach based on four inputs: labor, manufacturing investment, human capital investment, and public capital investment. We find little role for public capital investment in growth, but that manufacturing investment spurred growth in nonmetropolitan areas, in contrast to metropolitan areas. We also find that human capital investment mattered more for metropolitan areas than for nonmetropolitan areas. Further, the presence of more colleges and universities, more household amenities, and lower tax rates are all found to have encouraged human capital accumulation in U.S. labor markets.
Keywords:constant-elasticity-of-substitution  income growth  metropolitan  nonmetropolitan  Solow growth model
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