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An integrated model of regional and local residential sorting with application to air quality
Institution:1. University of Toronto, 563 Spadina Cres., Toronto, ON M5S 2J7, Canada;2. University of New Hampshire, 105 Main St., Durham, NH 03824, USA;3. 17 Major Street, Kitchener, ON N2H 4R1, Canada
Abstract:We examine the interconnectedness of demand for regionally and locally varying public goods using a residential sorting model. We propose a version of the model that describes household choices at the city (MSA) level and, conditional on city, the neighborhood (census tract) level. We use a two-stage budgeting argument to develop an empirically feasible sorting model that allows us to estimate preferences for regionally varying air quality while accounting for sorting at the local level. Our conceptual and empirical approach nests previous sorting models as special cases, allowing us to assess the importance of accounting for multiple spatial scales in our predictions for the cost of air pollution. Furthermore our preferred specification connects the city and neighborhood sorting margins to the upper and lower elements of a nested logit model, thereby establishing a useful correspondence between two stage budgeting and nested logit estimation. Empirically we find that estimates from a conventional model of sorting across MSAs imply a smaller marginal willingness to pay for air quality than estimates from our proposed model. We discuss how the difference is attributable in part to the omitted variable problems arising when tract level sorting is ignored.
Keywords:Residential sorting  Air pollution  Value of public goods  Hedonic price analysis
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