The Donut Effect of COVID-19 on Cities

Arjun Ramani, N. Bloom
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引用次数: 111

Abstract

Using data from the US Postal Service and Zillow, we quantify the effect of Covid-19 on migration patterns and real estate markets within and across US cities. We find two key results. First, within large US cities, households, businesses, and real estate demand have moved from dense central business districts (CBDs) towards lower density suburban zip-codes. We label this the “Donut Effect” reflecting the movement of activity out of city centers to the suburban ring. Second, while this observed reallocation occurs within cities, we do not see major reallocation across cities. That is, there is less evidence for large-scale movement of activity from large US cities to smaller regional cities or towns. We rationalize these findings by noting that working patterns post pandemic will frequently be hybrid, with workers commuting to their business premises typically three days per week. This level of commuting is less than pre-pandemic, making suburbs relatively more popular, but too frequent to allow employees to leave the cities containing their employer.
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新冠肺炎对城市的“甜甜圈效应
我们利用美国邮政服务和Zillow的数据,量化了Covid-19对美国城市内外的移民模式和房地产市场的影响。我们发现了两个关键结果。首先,在美国大城市,家庭、企业和房地产需求已经从密集的中央商务区(cbd)转移到密度较低的郊区。我们将这种现象称为“甜甜圈效应”,反映了活动从城市中心向郊区的转移。其次,虽然这种可观察到的再分配发生在城市内部,但我们没有看到城市间的大规模再分配。也就是说,从美国大城市向较小的区域性城市或城镇大规模转移的证据较少。我们通过指出大流行后的工作模式往往是混合的来合理化这些发现,工人通常每周上下班三天。这种通勤水平低于疫情前,使郊区相对更受欢迎,但过于频繁,员工无法离开雇主所在的城市。
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