Abstract
Standard models of the new economic geography predict that costs of living are lower in the core than in the periphery. But in reality they tend to be higher in agglomeration areas, mainly because of regional differences in housing costs. In this paper, we add a home goods sector to the seminal NEG model of Krugman (1991). We show that a core-periphery structure can endogenously emerge in which the core is the more expensive area. This result has an important normative implication. Since higher costs of living imply falling real wages if there is no nominal wage premium, it is not desirable for everybody to live in the core region. © Blackwell Publishing, Inc. 2006.
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CITATION STYLE
Suedekum, J. (2006). Agglomeration and regional costs of living. Journal of Regional Science, 46(3), 529–543. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9787.2006.00451.x
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