4.2 Article

Agglomeration economies in classical music

Journal

PAPERS IN REGIONAL SCIENCE
Volume 94, Issue 3, Pages 443-468

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pirs.12078

Keywords

Agglomeration economies; density effects; peer effects; productivity; urban history; cities; composer

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This study investigates agglomeration effects for classical music production in a wide range of cities for a global sample of composers born between 1750 and 1899. Theory suggests a trade-off between agglomeration economies (peer effects) and diseconomies (peer crowding). I test this hypothesis using historical data on composers and employ a unique instrumental variable - a measure of birth centrality, calculated as the average distance between a composer's birthplace and the birthplace of his peers. I find a strong causal impact of peer group size on the number of important compositions written in a given year. Consistent with theory, the productivity gain eventually decreases and is characterized by an inverted U-shaped relationship. These results are robust to a large series of tests, including checks for quality of peers, city characteristics, various measures of composers' productivity, and across different estimations in which also time-varying birth centrality measures are used as instrumental variables.

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