Marshall meets Bartik: Revisiting the mysteries of the trade
Abstract
We identify a causal effect of top inventor inflows on the patent productivity of local inventors by combining the idea-generating process described by Marshall (1890) with the Bartik (1991) instruments involving the state taxes and commuting zone characteristics of the United States. We find that local productivity gains go beyond organizational boundaries and co-inventor relationships, which implies the partially nonexcludable good nature of knowledge in a spatial economy and pertains to the m...
Description / Details
We identify a causal effect of top inventor inflows on the patent productivity of local inventors by combining the idea-generating process described by Marshall (1890) with the Bartik (1991) instruments involving the state taxes and commuting zone characteristics of the United States. We find that local productivity gains go beyond organizational boundaries and co-inventor relationships, which implies the partially nonexcludable good nature of knowledge in a spatial economy and pertains to the mysteries of the trade in the air. Our counterfactual experiment suggests that the spatial distribution of inventive activity is substantially distorted by the presence of state tax differences.
Source: arXiv:2604.26457v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.26457v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.26457v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.26457v1
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Apr 30, 2026
Environmental Science
Economics
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