17:00〜18:30
17:00〜18:30
"Mutual insurance for uninsurable income" (on-site presentation)
"Crowding in School Choice (with William Phan and Ryan Tierney)" (online presentation)
"From Hicksian Demand to Walrasian Equilibrium: An Elementary Existence Proof" (on-site presentation)
Yu Zhou (Kyoto University)
Michael Zierhut (Humboldt University)
17:00〜18:30
16:00〜17:30
17:00〜18:30
"Platform Oligopoly with Endogenous Homing: Implications for Mergers and Free Entry"
"Further Reasons for the "But for" Defense of a Grant-Back Clause and the Attribute of Innovation"
"A Folk Theorem for Infinitely Repeated Games with Equivalent Payoffs under Optional Monitoring"
安橋 正人 (京都大学)
関口 格 (京都大学)
15:00〜16:30
17:00〜18:30
17:00〜18:30
17:00〜18:30
(with Juan-José Ganuza and Fernando Goméz)
17:00〜18:30
要旨:Economies transform at an uneven pace: San Jose’s meteoric rise coexists with Detroit’s slow decline. This paper develops a dynamic overlapping generations model of economic geography to explain variation in structural transformation across space and time. In the model, historical exposure to different industries creates persistence in occupational structure, and non-homothetic preferences and differential productivity growth lead to different rates of structural transformation. Despite the heterogeneity across locations, sectors, and time, the model remains tractable and is calibrated to match metropolitan area data for the U.S. economy from 1980 to 2010. The calibration allows us to back out measures of upward mobility and inequality, thereby providing theoretical underpinnings to the Gatsby Curve. The counterfactual analysis shows that structural transformation has substantial effects on mobility: if there were no productivity growth in the service sector, income mobility would be 6 percent higher, and if amenities were equalized across locations, it would rise by 10 percent.