Resilience from the Micro Perspective

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TY  - JOUR
  - Doran, J. and B. Fingleton
  - 2015
  - March
  - Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society
  - Resilience from the Micro Perspective
  - Published
  - ()
  - counterfactual, New Economic Geography, resilience, USA, Urban Economics
  - 8
  - 2
  - 205
  - 223
  - Perhaps uniquely, we combine individual-level data from the American Community Survey 2005–2011 with aggregate data for small areas to examine the resilience of individuals’ wages to the 2008 economic crisis. A Mincer-type wage equation, incorporating market potential and employment density, is estimated, leading to a measure of resilience based on actual wages in 2011 and on a counterfactual obtained from our wage equation. We find that individuals living in areas with a higher level of market potential are more resilient, controlling for individual-level characteristics such as education and ethnicity, indicating that both individual-specific and place-specific factors are important.
  - https://academic.oup.com/cjres/article/8/2/205/333435/Resilience-from-the-micro-perspective
DA  - 2015/03
ER  - 
@article{V288214091,
   = {Doran, J. and B. Fingleton},
   = {2015},
   = {March},
   = {Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society},
   = {Resilience from the Micro Perspective},
   = {Published},
   = {()},
   = {counterfactual, New Economic Geography, resilience, USA, Urban Economics},
   = {8},
   = {2},
  pages = {205--223},
   = {{Perhaps uniquely, we combine individual-level data from the American Community Survey 2005–2011 with aggregate data for small areas to examine the resilience of individuals’ wages to the 2008 economic crisis. A Mincer-type wage equation, incorporating market potential and employment density, is estimated, leading to a measure of resilience based on actual wages in 2011 and on a counterfactual obtained from our wage equation. We find that individuals living in areas with a higher level of market potential are more resilient, controlling for individual-level characteristics such as education and ethnicity, indicating that both individual-specific and place-specific factors are important.}},
   = {https://academic.oup.com/cjres/article/8/2/205/333435/Resilience-from-the-micro-perspective},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSDoran, J. and B. Fingleton
YEAR2015
MONTHMarch
JOURNAL_CODECambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society
TITLEResilience from the Micro Perspective
STATUSPublished
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORDcounterfactual, New Economic Geography, resilience, USA, Urban Economics
VOLUME8
ISSUE2
START_PAGE205
END_PAGE223
ABSTRACTPerhaps uniquely, we combine individual-level data from the American Community Survey 2005–2011 with aggregate data for small areas to examine the resilience of individuals’ wages to the 2008 economic crisis. A Mincer-type wage equation, incorporating market potential and employment density, is estimated, leading to a measure of resilience based on actual wages in 2011 and on a counterfactual obtained from our wage equation. We find that individuals living in areas with a higher level of market potential are more resilient, controlling for individual-level characteristics such as education and ethnicity, indicating that both individual-specific and place-specific factors are important.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URLhttps://academic.oup.com/cjres/article/8/2/205/333435/Resilience-from-the-micro-perspective
DOI_LINK
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS