Urban Transit Infrastructure: Spatial Mismatch and Labor Market Power

Working papers in socioeconomic research

Urban Transit Infrastructure: Spatial Mismatch and Labor Market Power

Publication date: 2022-09-01

Authors: Pérez, Jorge ; Vial, Felipe ; Zárate, Román

Does transit infrastructure reduce labor market power? This paper estimates the effects of a large subway expansion on local labor market outcomes in Santiago, Chile. Using a linked employer-employee dataset with spatial information, we estimate the effects of the network expansion on the most-affected workers and firms through a reduced-form analysis. We find changes in work locations and wages consistent with a reduction in firms’ labor market power around areas connected to the subway network after the expansion. We then lay out a quantitative spatial equilibrium model where firms behave as oligopsonies in the labor market to calculate the welfare gains from the transit infrastructure expansion. Our model allows us to decompose the welfare gains into i) the efficiency gains through improved matching between workers and firms and ii) the gains from reducing labor misallocation through labor market power responses. The model also provides a framework to analyze the distributional implications of the infrastructure expansion. We find that workers benefit as firm owners see reduced profits and that accounting for labor market power responses amplifies the welfare gains.

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Technical sheet

Language: en

Country / Region: Chile

Format: pdf

Cite publication

Pérez, Jorge; Vial, Felipe; Zárate, Román. (2022). Urban Transit Infrastructure: Spatial Mismatch and Labor Market Power. Caracas: CAF

Authors

Pérez, Jorge

No. of publications 1

Vial, Felipe

No. of publications 1

Zárate, Román

No. of publications 1

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