Abstract
In recent decades, gentrification has transformed American central city neighborhoods. I estimate a spatial equilibrium model to show that the rising value of high-skilled workers' time contributes to the gentrification of American central cities. I show that the increasing value of time raises the cost of commuting and exogenously increases the demand for central locations by high-skilled workers. While change in the value of time has a modest direct effect on gentrification of central cities, the effect is substantially magnified by endogenous amenity improvement driven by the changes in local skill mix.
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CITATION STYLE
Su, Y. (2019). The Rising Value of Time and the Origin of Urban Gentrification. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Working Papers, 2019(1913). https://doi.org/10.24149/wp1913
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