Capital shocks and the great urban divide

Author:

Daams Michiel N1ORCID,McCann Philip2ORCID,Veneri Paolo3ORCID,Barkham Richard4,Schoenmaker Dennis5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economic Geography, Faculty of Spatial Sciences, University of Groningen , Landleven 1 , Groningen 9747 AD, The Netherlands

2. The Productivity Institute, Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester , Booth Street West , M15 6PB Manchester, UK

3. Gran Sasso Science Institute , Viale Luigi Rendina, 26-28, 67100 L'Aquila , Italy

4. CBRE , 2100 McKinney , Dallas, TX 75201, USA

5. CBRE , Henrietta Place , W1G 0NB London, UK

Abstract

Abstract This article exploits signals of capital pricing and availability in US cities which are obtained from uniquely detailed data on real estate investments. We identify how places were differently affected by the global financial crisis and provide insights which offer an alternative explanation of why US economic growth continues to experience spatial divergence after many decades of convergence. Investment pricing uncovers that before the crisis capital was allocated efficiently across localities, whereas the global financial shock favored large and prosperous places. These findings point to persistent post-crisis asymmetry in local capital market conditions and underscore the capital risk-safety aspects of agglomeration.

Funder

UKRI-ESRC Productivity Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Geography, Planning and Development

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