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Cities, immigrant diversity, and complex problem solving

Cities, immigrant diversity, and complex problem solving
Cities, immigrant diversity, and complex problem solving
Recent evidence suggests that greater immigrant diversity in cities and workplaces makes workers more productive. However, even the most careful extant empirical work remains at some remove from the main mechanisms that theory says underlie this relationship: interpersonal interaction in the service of complex problem solving. This paper aims to 'stress-test' these theoretical foundations, by observing how the relationship between diversity and productivity varies across workers differently engaged in complex problem solving and interaction. Using a uniquely comprehensive matched employer-employee dataset for the United States starting as early as 1991 and continuing to 2008, this paper shows that growing immigrant diversity in cities and workplaces is related to higher wages for workers intensively engaged in various forms of complex problem solving, including tasks involving high levels of innovation, creativity, and STEM. Mixed evidence is found for the theory that benefits are concentrated among those whose work require problem solving as well as high levels of interpersonal interaction.
0048-7333
1175-1185
Cooke, Abigail
d6d78cd6-14ba-43b9-8ee9-0c5e1492ac33
Kemeny, Thomas
b9e4ac0c-bc73-4905-8229-f970518cde88
Cooke, Abigail
d6d78cd6-14ba-43b9-8ee9-0c5e1492ac33
Kemeny, Thomas
b9e4ac0c-bc73-4905-8229-f970518cde88

Cooke, Abigail and Kemeny, Thomas (2017) Cities, immigrant diversity, and complex problem solving. Research Policy, 46 (6), 1175-1185. (doi:10.1016/j.respol.2017.05.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that greater immigrant diversity in cities and workplaces makes workers more productive. However, even the most careful extant empirical work remains at some remove from the main mechanisms that theory says underlie this relationship: interpersonal interaction in the service of complex problem solving. This paper aims to 'stress-test' these theoretical foundations, by observing how the relationship between diversity and productivity varies across workers differently engaged in complex problem solving and interaction. Using a uniquely comprehensive matched employer-employee dataset for the United States starting as early as 1991 and continuing to 2008, this paper shows that growing immigrant diversity in cities and workplaces is related to higher wages for workers intensively engaged in various forms of complex problem solving, including tasks involving high levels of innovation, creativity, and STEM. Mixed evidence is found for the theory that benefits are concentrated among those whose work require problem solving as well as high levels of interpersonal interaction.

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diversityLEHDP3_042617_RESPOL_accepted - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 8 May 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 May 2017
Published date: July 2017
Organisations: Economy, Governance & Culture

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 410920
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/410920
ISSN: 0048-7333
PURE UUID: d21f862b-d18a-42c1-9b65-e02305c64b4e

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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:20

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Contributors

Author: Abigail Cooke
Author: Thomas Kemeny

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