The Economics of Cities and Regions (2025)
TA for Professor Esteban Rossi-Hansberg, University of Chicago, Undergraduate, 2025
Course Description
This course studies business and individual location decisions and how they determine the main economic forces that lead to the existence and performance of cities and regional agglomerations. The course starts by developing a simple theory of cities and its implications for city size, firm productivity, and housing prices. It then studies evidence of the impact of cities on firm and worker productivity, urban amenities, and congestion. We will discuss the problems in measuring these forces, the methodologies to do so, as well as the implications of this measurement for businesses, individuals, and urban policy. We will also study the internal structure of cities, and how to evaluate the effect of new infrastructure or policy on land and housing values as well as on overall welfare. Finally, the course will analyze the role cities and regions play in aggregate economic development.
Problem Sets
I was responsible for preparing problem sets and exams for this course.
- This problem set guides students through a rigorous derivation of the linear city model covered in class to help them better understand the assumptions behind the model.
- It also asks students to solve a two-city model quantitatively to understand the concept of general equilibrium.
- This problem set guides students through an application of hedonic regression using data from a research paper.
- It also helps students understand concepts related to sorting and congestion.
TA Session Materials
I was also responsible for holding weekly TA sesssions to cover materials complementary to the course.
