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Economic Geography and Structural Change

Authors :
Bohr, Clement E.
Mestieri, Marti
Robert-Nicoud, Frederic
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

As countries develop, the relative importance of agriculture declines and economic activity becomes spatially concentrated. We develop a model integrating structural change and regional disparities to jointly capture these phenomena. A key modeling innovation ensuring analytical tractability is the introduction of non-homothetic Cobb-Douglas preferences, which are characterized by constant unitary elasticity of substitution and non-constant income elasticity. As labor productivity increases over time, economic well-being rises, leading to a declining expenditure share on agricultural goods. Labor reallocates away from agriculture, and industry concentrates spatially, further increasing aggregate productivity: structural change and regional disparities are two mutually reinforcing outcomes and propagators of the growth process.

Subjects

Subjects :
Economics - General Economics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2412.03755
Document Type :
Working Paper