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Functional Labour Market Areas for Chile

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  • Francisco Rowe

Abstract

Administrative areas are arbitrarily designed and do not necessarily reflect the geographical patterns of socio-economic and labour market activity. Labour market areas (LMAs) are required to analyse spatial labour market activity and provide a framework to guide spatially-explicit employment policy development. This resource describes a data source of a set of recently created labour market areas for Chile.

Suggested Citation

  • Francisco Rowe, 2017. "Functional Labour Market Areas for Chile," REGION, European Regional Science Association, vol. 4, pages 7-9.
  • Handle: RePEc:wiw:wiwreg:region_4_3_199
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    File URL: https://openjournals.wu.ac.at/ojs/index.php/region/article/view/199/version/153
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Ron A. Boschma & Koen Frenken, 2006. "Why is economic geography not an evolutionary science? Towards an evolutionary economic geography," Journal of Economic Geography, Oxford University Press, vol. 6(3), pages 273-302, June.
    2. José Manuel Casado-Díaz & Lucas Martínez-Bernabéu & Francisco Rowe, 2017. "An evolutionary approach to the delimitation of labour market areas: an empirical application for Chile," Spatial Economic Analysis, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 12(4), pages 379-403, October.
    3. Ron Martin & Peter Sunley, 2015. "On the notion of regional economic resilience: conceptualization and explanation," Journal of Economic Geography, Oxford University Press, vol. 15(1), pages 1-42.
    4. Cesar A. Hidalgo & Ricardo Hausmann, 2009. "The Building Blocks of Economic Complexity," Papers 0909.3890, arXiv.org.
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    Cited by:

    1. César, Andrés & Falcone, Guillermo & Gasparini, Leonardo, 2021. "Costs and benefits of trade shocks: Evidence from Chilean local labor markets," Labour Economics, Elsevier, vol. 73(C).
    2. Dani Arribas-Bel & Mark Green & Francisco Rowe & Alex Singleton, 2021. "Open data products-A framework for creating valuable analysis ready data," Journal of Geographical Systems, Springer, vol. 23(4), pages 497-514, October.
    3. Viviana Carriel & Marcelo Lufin & Manuel Pérez-Trujillo, 2022. "Do workers negative self-select when they commute? Evidence for the Chilean case of long-distance commuting," The Annals of Regional Science, Springer;Western Regional Science Association, vol. 69(1), pages 255-279, August.

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