This Website uses cookies. By using this website you are agreeing to our use of cookies and to the terms and conditions listed in our data protection policy. Read more

Labour Economics

Equilibrium Search Unemployment with Explicit Spatial Frictions

Journal Article
Reference
Wasmer, Etienne and Yves Zenou (2006). “Equilibrium Search Unemployment with Explicit Spatial Frictions”. Labour Economics 13(2), 143–165. doi.org/10.1016/j.labeco.2004.09.002

Authors
Etienne Wasmer, Yves Zenou

Assuming that job search efficiency decreases with distance to jobs, workers’ location in a city depends on spatial elements such as commuting costs and land prices and on labour elements such as wages and the matching technology. In the absence of moving costs, we show that there exists a unique equilibrium in which employed and unemployed workers are perfectly segregated but move at each employment transition. We investigate the interactions between the land and the labour market equilibrium and show under which condition they are interdependent. When relocation costs become positive, a new zone appears in which both the employed and the unemployed co-exist and are not mobile. We demonstrate that the size of this area goes continuously to zero when moving costs vanish. Finally, we endogeneize search effort, show that it negatively depends on distance to jobs and that long and short-term unemployed workers coexist and locate in different areas of the city.