Spillovers from immigrant diversity in cities
Spillovers from immigrant diversity in cities
Using comprehensive longitudinal matched employer-employee data for the U.S., this paper provides new evidence on the relationship between productivity and immigration- spawned urban diversity. Existing empirical work has uncovered a robust positive correlation between productivity and immigrant diversity, supporting theory suggesting that diversity acts as a local public good that makes workers more productive by enlarging the pool of knowledge available to them, as well as by fostering opportunities for them to recombine ideas to generate novelty. This paper makes several empirical and conceptual contributions. First, it improves on existing empirical work by addressing various sources of potential bias, especially from unobserved heterogeneity among individuals, work establishments, and cities. Second, it augments identification by using longitudinal data that permits examination of how diversity and productivity co-move. Third, the paper seeks to reveal whether diversity acts upon productivity chiefly at the scale of the city or the workplace. Findings confirm that urban immigrant diversity produces positive and nontrivial spillovers for U.S. workers. This social return represents a distinct channel through which immigration generates broad-based economic benefits
LSE Spatial Economics Research Centre
Kemeny, Thomas
b9e4ac0c-bc73-4905-8229-f970518cde88
Cooke, Abigail
d6d78cd6-14ba-43b9-8ee9-0c5e1492ac33
June 2015
Kemeny, Thomas
b9e4ac0c-bc73-4905-8229-f970518cde88
Cooke, Abigail
d6d78cd6-14ba-43b9-8ee9-0c5e1492ac33
Kemeny, Thomas and Cooke, Abigail
(2015)
Spillovers from immigrant diversity in cities
(SERC Discussion Paper, 175)
London, GB.
LSE Spatial Economics Research Centre
30pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Discussion Paper)
Abstract
Using comprehensive longitudinal matched employer-employee data for the U.S., this paper provides new evidence on the relationship between productivity and immigration- spawned urban diversity. Existing empirical work has uncovered a robust positive correlation between productivity and immigrant diversity, supporting theory suggesting that diversity acts as a local public good that makes workers more productive by enlarging the pool of knowledge available to them, as well as by fostering opportunities for them to recombine ideas to generate novelty. This paper makes several empirical and conceptual contributions. First, it improves on existing empirical work by addressing various sources of potential bias, especially from unobserved heterogeneity among individuals, work establishments, and cities. Second, it augments identification by using longitudinal data that permits examination of how diversity and productivity co-move. Third, the paper seeks to reveal whether diversity acts upon productivity chiefly at the scale of the city or the workplace. Findings confirm that urban immigrant diversity produces positive and nontrivial spillovers for U.S. workers. This social return represents a distinct channel through which immigration generates broad-based economic benefits
Text
kemeny & cooke - 2015 - diversity spillovers p1.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Published date: June 2015
Organisations:
Economy, Society and Space
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 380246
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380246
PURE UUID: e64ca32e-1d30-44ef-87dc-5c329be46a2c
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Date deposited: 04 Sep 2015 15:17
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:57
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Contributors
Author:
Thomas Kemeny
Author:
Abigail Cooke
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