Working Paper

The City Paradox: Skilled Services and Remote Work

Lukas Althoff, Fabian Eckert, Sharat Ganapati, Conor Walsh
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8734

The large cities in the US are the most expensive places to live. Paradoxically, this cost is disproportionately paid by workers who could work remotely, and live anywhere. The greater potential for remote work in large cities is mostly accounted for by their specialization in skill- and information-intensive service industries. We highlight that this specialization makes these cities vulnerable to remote work shocks. When high-skill workers begin to work from home or leave the city altogether, they withdraw spending from local consumer service industries that rely heavily on their demand. As a result, low-skill service workers in big cities bore most of the recent pandemic’s economic impact.

CESifo Category
Labour Markets
Trade Policy
Keywords: remote work, high-skill services, technological change
JEL Classification: O330, R110, R120