创业与城市增长:基于历史矿山的实证评估

Entrepreneurship and Urban Growth: An Empirical Assessment with Historical Mines

Review of Economics and Statistics · 2012
被引 23
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

利用美国历史矿山分布作为工具变量,研究发现靠近矿山的城市企业规模更大、初创企业更少,且创业活动与城市就业增长存在持久关联,主要通过初创企业就业增长较低体现。

Abstract

Measures of entrepreneurship, such as average establishment size and the prevalence of start-ups, correlate strongly with employment growth across and within metropolitan areas, but the endogeneity of these measures bedevils interpretation. Chinitz (1961) hypothesized that coal mines near Pittsburgh led that city to specialization in industries, like steel, with significant scale economies and that those big firms led to a dearth of entrepreneurial human capital across several generations. We test this idea by looking at the spatial location of past mines across the United States: proximity to historical mining deposits is associated with bigger firms and fewer start-ups in the middle of the 20th century. We use mines as an instrument for our entrepreneurship measures and find a persistent link between entrepreneurship and city employment growth; this connection works primarily through lower employment growth of start-ups in cities that are closer to mines. These effects hold in cold and warm regions alike and in industries that are not directly related to mining, such as trade, finance and services. We use quantile instrumental variable regression techniques and identify mostly homogeneous effects throughout the conditional city growth distribution.

创业精神城市增长历史矿产工具变量