How cultural and public services make cities more resilient to economic shocks
Public and cultural services help to mitigate the adverse effect of massive job displacement on a city’s population, according to three economists.
Kristian Behrens is Associate Professor of Economics and holder of the Canada Research Chair in Regional Impacts of Globalization at the Université du Québec à Montréal (ESG-UQAM), Canada. He is also affiliated with the Centre interuniversitaire sur le risque, les politiques économiques et l'emploi (CIRPÉE) and the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). The main focus of his research is on international trade (impacts of trade integration, trade frictions), on regional economics (spatial distribution of economic activity, changes in spatial structures) and on urban economics (spatial sorting, agglomeration economies). He earned his PhD in Economics at Université de Bourgogne, France, and has been a post-doc and Marie Curie Fellow of the European Union at the Center for Operations Research and Econometrics (CORE), Belgium.
Public and cultural services help to mitigate the adverse effect of massive job displacement on a city’s population, according to three economists.
The pandemic has accelerated remote working, but there are longer term benefits and drawbacks, with impacts on productivity, GDP and inequality.
Gentrification – which describes the influx of affluent and educated people into former working class neighbourhoods – is a major concern in numerous cities around the world. While civil ...