Discussion paper

DP2645 Skills, Agglomeration and Segmentation

We investigate the role of skill heterogeneity in explaining location patterns induced by pecuniary externalities (Krugman (1991)). In our setting, sellers with higher skills perform better in the marketplace, and their sales are larger. Selling to distant locations leads to lower sales because of both (pecuniary) transport costs and communication costs that reduce the perceived quality of goods. A symmetry-breaking result is obtained: symmetric configurations cannot be stable, and regional inequality is inevitable. The relatively more skilled choose to stay in the location with higher aggregate income and skill, while the relatively less skilled stay in the other. The model allows us to analyse the links between the extent of interregional inequality and the extent of interpersonal skill inequality.

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Citation

Turrini, A and T Mori (2000), ‘DP2645 Skills, Agglomeration and Segmentation‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 2645. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp2645