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Article Dans Une Revue Econometrica Année : 2012

The productivity advantages of large cities: distingushing agglomeration from firm selection

Résumé

Firms are more productive, on average, in larger cities. Two main explanations have been offered: firm selection (larger cities toughen competition, allowing only the most productive to survive) and agglomeration economies (larger cities promote interactions that increase productivity), possibly reinforced by localized natural advantage. To distinguish between them, we nest a generalized version of a tractable firm selection model and a standard model of agglomeration. Stronger selection in larger cities left-truncates the productivity distribution, whereas stronger agglomeration right-shifts and dilates the distribution. Using this prediction, French establishment-level data, and a new quantile approach, we show that firm selection cannot explain spatial productivity differences. This result holds across sectors, city size thresholds, establishment samples, and area definitions.

Dates et versions

hal-00812695 , version 1 (12-04-2013)

Identifiants

Citer

Pierre-Philippe Combes, Gilles Duranton, Laurent Gobillon, Diego Puga, Sébastien Roux. The productivity advantages of large cities: distingushing agglomeration from firm selection. Econometrica, 2012, 80 (6), pp.2543-2594. ⟨10.3982/ECTA8442⟩. ⟨hal-00812695⟩
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