锘縏Y - RPRT AB - This research quantifies productivity-related agglomeration benefits arising from the concentration of employment in Australia. Clustering of jobs in cities can improve labour productivity by reducing the costs of exchanging goods and services, labour and ideas, and may allow for better matching of skills to jobs, which in turn may produce higher wages as firms compete for skilled labour. However, cities also typically have higher house prices, which reduce entry and ongoing affordability, and greater pollution and other wellbeing detriments such as crime and noise which may reduce productivity. Employment density (or agglomeration) is significantly associated with higher hourly wages and thus productivity. The research estimates suggest that a doubling of employment density raises wages by 1 to 4 per cent. This is in line with international evidence, but somewhat lower than earlier Australian estimates. While agglomeration has a positive effect, individual and firm characteristics are the key determinants of spatial variation in wages. Analysis of agglomeration benefits across the wage distribution reveals considerable variation, as lower-wage and middle income earners benefit less from agglomeration than higher-wage earners. Agglomeration benefits are substantively consumed by housing costs for workers on lower wages (particularly so for workers earning in the lowest 20 per cent of wage levels). AU - Nygaard, Christian AU - Parkinson, Sharon AU - Reynolds, Margaret CY - Melbourne DO - doi: 10.18408/ahuri5122401 L1 - internal-pdf://2064563578/AHURI-Final-Report-366-Agglomeration-effects-a.pdf PB - Australian Housing and Urban 漫天堂入口 Institute PY - 2021 ST - Agglomeration effects and housing market dynamics T2 - 漫天堂入口Final Report No. 366 TI - Agglomeration effects and housing market dynamics UR - /research/final-reports/366 ID - 1110 ER -