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Article
Spatial labor markets and technology spillovers: analysis from the US Midwest
Economics Working Papers (2002–2016)
  • Daniel C. Monchuk, University of Southern Mississippi
  • John A. Miranowski, Iowa State University
Document Type
Working Paper
Publication Date
8-1-2004
Working Paper Number
WP #04022, August 2004; Old working paper #12196
Abstract

The primary focus of this paper is the impact of knowledge creation and innovative activity on non-farm employment growth. Non-farm employment growth is modeled in a stylized model where new knowledge and local economic externalities are key factors driving technology growth. For our empirical application we assume that new knowledge and innovative activity are embodied in new patent filings within the county. To explicitly capture spillovers between counties we apply spatial econometric techniques. The econometric model, based on a 2-stage spatial econometric estimation procedure, is tested for all counties in US Midwestern States of Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota and North Dakota. The results indicate the positive influence of knowledge creation and innovative activity, as captured by patents, on non-farm employment growth during the period 1969-2000. We also find strong evidence of local spatial employment growth spillovers contributing in a positive manner to explaining non-farm employment growth. The key results also hold when we consider sub-samples of the study period suggesting our model is quite robust to the time period of analysis.

Disciplines
File Format
application/pdf
Length
39 pages
Citation Information
Daniel C. Monchuk and John A. Miranowski. "Spatial labor markets and technology spillovers: analysis from the US Midwest" (2004)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/john-miranowski/19/