Publication | Open Access
Matching in Cities
82
Citations
46
References
2022
Year
Comparative Urban ResearchGeographical InequalityLarge CitiesSocial SciencesLabour GeographyEconomic AnalysisEconomic InequalitySocial InequalityPublic PolicyEconomicsUrban PlanningLabor Market OutcomeGeographical Wage DisparitiesLabor EconomicsUrban GeographySpatial EconomicsUrban DesignSociologyUrban EconomicsBusinessLabor Market ImpactUnemploymentUrban Condition
Abstract Using administrative German data, we show that large cities allow for a more efficient matching between workers and firms and this has important consequences for geographical inequality. Specifically, the match between high-quality workers and high-quality plants is significantly tighter in large cities relative to small cities. Wages in large cities are higher not only because of the higher worker quality but also because of a stronger assortative matching. Strong assortative matching in large cities magnifies wage differences caused by worker sorting, and is a key factor in explaining the growth of geographical wage disparities over the last three decades.
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