Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 19 segundos...
Inicio  /  Urban Science  /  Vol: 5 Par: 1 (2021)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Innovations and Economic Output Scale with Social Interactions in the Workforce

Deryc T. Painter    
Shade T. Shutters and Elizabeth Wentz    

Resumen

The COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 fundamentally changed the way we interact with and engage in commerce. Social distancing and stay-at-home orders leave businesses and cities wondering how future economic activity moves forward. The reduction in face-to-face interactions creates an impetus to understand how social interactivity influences economic efficiency and rates of innovation. Here, we create a measure of the degree to which a workforce engages in social interactions, analyzing its relationships to economic innovation and efficiency. We do this by decomposing U.S. occupations into individual work activities, determining which of those activities are associated with face-to-face interactions. We then re-aggregate the labor forces of U.S. metropolitan statistical areas (MSA) into a metric of urban social interactiveness. Using a novel measure of urbanized area, we then calculate each MSA?s density of social work activities. We find that our metric of urban socialness is positively correlated with a city?s per worker patent production. Furthermore, we use our set of social work activities to reaggregate the workforces of U.S. industries into a metric of industry social interactivness, finding that this measure scales superlinearly with an industry?s per worker GDP. Together, the results suggest that social interaction among workers is an important driver of both a city?s rate of invention and an industry?s economic efficiency. Finally, we briefly highlight analogies between cities and stars and discuss their potential to guide further research, vis-à-vis the density of social interactions ?igniting? a city or industry.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Pejman Ebrahimi, Aidin Salamzadeh, Maryam Soleimani, Seyed Mohammad Khansari, Hadi Zarea and Maria Fekete-Farkas    
This study evaluated the impact of startup technology innovations and customer relationship management (CRM) performance on customer participation, value co-creation, and consumer purchase behavior (CPB). This analytical study empirically tested the prop... ver más

 
Amusan Lekan, Aigbavboa Clinton and James Owolabi    
Construction 4.0 (C4.0) has tremendously impacted construction activities worldwide in recent times. This effect was made possible on account of innovations brought about by Industry 4.0 (I4.0). Industry 4.0 has the potential to create Construction 4.0 t... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Taher M. Ghazal, Mohammad Kamrul Hasan, Muhammad Turki Alshurideh, Haitham M. Alzoubi, Munir Ahmad, Syed Shehryar Akbar, Barween Al Kurdi and Iman A. Akour    
Smart city is a collective term for technologies and concepts that are directed toward making cities efficient, technologically more advanced, greener and more socially inclusive. These concepts include technical, economic and social innovations. This te... ver más
Revista: Future Internet

 
Sulala Al-Hamadani, Temitope Egbelakin, Willy Sher, Jason Von Meding    
The application of ecological modernization (EM) (to delink industry growth from environmental damage) to minimize construction waste has not been explored within the construction industry in general, and the New South Wales (NSW) construction industry i... ver más

 
Fabian Wenner, Khoi Anh Dang, Melina Hölzl, Alessandro Pedrazzoli, Magdalena Schmidkunz, Jiaqi Wang and Alain Thierstein    
Transport accessibility is one of the most significant locational factors for both households and firms, and thus a potentially self-reinforcing driver of urban development. The spatial structure and dynamics of accessibility hence have the potential to ... ver más
Revista: Urban Science