• Graduate program
  • Research
  • News
  • Events
    • Summer School
      • Climate Change
      • Gender in Society
      • Inequalities in Health and Healthcare
      • Business Data Science Summer School Program
      • Receive updates
    • Events Calendar
    • Events Archive
    • Tinbergen Institute Lectures
    • Conference: Consumer Search and Markets
    • Annual Tinbergen Institute Conference
  • Summer School
    • Climate Change
    • Gender in Society
    • Inequalities in Health and Healthcare
    • Business Data Science Summer School Program
    • Receive updates
  • Alumni
  • Magazine
Home | Events Archive | The Skyscraper Revolution: Global Economic Development and Land Savings
Seminar

The Skyscraper Revolution: Global Economic Development and Land Savings


  • Series
  • Speaker(s)
    Gabriel Ahlfeldt (London School of Economics, United Kingdom)
  • Field
    Spatial Economics
  • Location
    Tinbergen Institute Amsterdam, room 1.01
    Amsterdam
  • Date and time

    October 19, 2023
    12:00 - 13:00

Abstract

The construction of tall buildings has been central in facilitating sustainable urbanization and growth in cities around the world. Using supply side variation for identification, we demonstrate that the average elasticity of city population to aggregate city building heights is 0.12, and that of city built area to heights is -0.17. Land saved from development by post-1975 tall building construction is over 80% covered in vegetation. To isolate the effects of technology-induced reductions in the cost of height from correlated demand shocks, we use interactions of static demand differences and the geography of bedrock as instruments for observed changes in height, a triple difference identification strategy. Central to the analysis is newly organized data on the population, land area, and a measure of total height for 1975-2015 in 12,877 cities worldwide. Quantification using a canonical urban model suggests that about two-thirds of the potential benefits from reductions in the cost of heights has been realized. Worker welfare would increase by 1% if constraints to vertical development were relaxed, though aggregate land rents would decline by 2%.