Calendrier du 08 octobre 2024
PSI-PSE (Petit Séminaire Informel de la Paris School of Economics) Seminar
Du 08/10/2024 de 17:30 à 18:30
R1-09
OTTMER Henning (Uppsala University and IFAU)
Reduced basic old-age pension for immigrants: implications for work and welfare
Virtual Development Economics Seminar
Du 08/10/2024 de 16:00 à 17:00
Zoom
OLIVA Paulina (University of Southern California and BREAD)
Scale Effects of Rapid Transit and Automobile Adoption
Paris Trade Seminar
Du 08/10/2024 de 14:30 à 16:00
Sciences Po, 28 rue des Saints-Pères, 75007 Paris (M° Saint Germain des prés), salle H401 / Jean-Paul Fitoussi
VANNOORENBERGHE Gonzague (UCLouvain)
Globalization and the urban-rural divide in France
écrit avec F. Mayneris and D. Verdini
This paper investigates whether globalization has led to an economic decoupling between urban and rural areas in France. Specifically, we examine whether local labor markets in large urban areas have become more globally connected while weakening their domestic economic ties. To address this question, we calibrate a structural model using extensive administrative data from 1995 to 2015, capturing key linkages across French local labor markets. These linkages arise through competition in goods and labor markets, input-output relationships, and firms' ownership networks. Contrary to popular concerns, our findings reveal no evidence of urban-rural economic decoupling over the period, nor any significant impact of globalization on this relationship.
Applied Economics Lunch Seminar
Du 08/10/2024 de 12:30 à 13:30
R2-21
BOTHE Philipp ()
Lost in Aggregation: The Local Environmental and Welfare Effects of Large Industrial Shutdowns
The clean energy transition and large-scale deindustrialization have caused major changes in the industrial landscape of many high-income economies. This paper investigates how closures of large industrial facilities in Germany affect surrounding communities. By exploiting quasi-random variation in the timing of facility shutdowns, I analyze the neighborhood-level effects of these closures using data at the 1km x 1km grid cell level. I find that shutdowns of industrial sites lead to significant improvements in environmental amenities as represented by air quality. These environmental benefits, however, do not capitalize in increasing housing prices – a result that contrasts with existing evidence for the US context. Instead, neighborhoods affected by industrial closures experience substantial local downturns, with average household income dropping by 4% in the most affected neighborhoods. The resulting total annual income loss attributable to facility shutdowns amounts to e0.7 - e1.9 billion. Using a simplified model of neighborhood choice, I further show that the net amenity effects of industrial shutdowns do not balance the negative effects on income and housing prices. These findings have important implications for place-based policies in the context of significant structural change. Additionally, using
the newly assembled granular data, I reveal biases from the ecological fallacy in previous assessments of environmental inequality in Germany and show that there exists significant inequality in the exposure to fine particulate matter across the income distribution.