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How urbanization affect employment and social interactions

How urbanization affect employment and social interactions
How urbanization affect employment and social interactions
We develop a model where the unemployed workers in the city can find a job either directly or through weak or strong ties. We show that, in denser areas, individuals choose to interact with more people and meet more random encounters (weak ties) than in sparsely populated areas. We also demonstrate that, for a low urbanization level, there is a unique steady-state equilibrium where workers do not interact with weak ties, while, for a high level of urbanization, there is a unique steady-state equilibrium with full social interactions. We show that these equilibria are usually not socially efficient when the urban population has an intermediate size because there are too few social interactions compared to the social optimum. Finally, even when social interactions are optimal, we show that there is over-urbanization in equilibrium.
0014-2921
131-155
Sato, Yasuhiro
d150f70a-f437-4a33-afb7-d9ddcb205a30
Zenou, Yves
38bf0c72-462b-4c08-8fd1-ce365b0296dc
Sato, Yasuhiro
d150f70a-f437-4a33-afb7-d9ddcb205a30
Zenou, Yves
38bf0c72-462b-4c08-8fd1-ce365b0296dc

Sato, Yasuhiro and Zenou, Yves (2015) How urbanization affect employment and social interactions. European Economic Review, 75, 131-155. (doi:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2015.01.011).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We develop a model where the unemployed workers in the city can find a job either directly or through weak or strong ties. We show that, in denser areas, individuals choose to interact with more people and meet more random encounters (weak ties) than in sparsely populated areas. We also demonstrate that, for a low urbanization level, there is a unique steady-state equilibrium where workers do not interact with weak ties, while, for a high level of urbanization, there is a unique steady-state equilibrium with full social interactions. We show that these equilibria are usually not socially efficient when the urban population has an intermediate size because there are too few social interactions compared to the social optimum. Finally, even when social interactions are optimal, we show that there is over-urbanization in equilibrium.

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More information

Published date: 2 February 2015
Organisations: Economics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 408271
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/408271
ISSN: 0014-2921
PURE UUID: cb1ebcc8-6966-4034-b987-8683bf2ab720
ORCID for Yves Zenou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6516-0812

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Date deposited: 18 May 2017 04:02
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:11

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Contributors

Author: Yasuhiro Sato
Author: Yves Zenou ORCID iD

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