Subtopic Deep Dive

Regional Economic Disparities New Zealand
Research Guide

What is Regional Economic Disparities New Zealand?

Regional Economic Disparities New Zealand examines productivity gaps, migration patterns, and infrastructure investments between regions like Auckland and rural South Island using shift-share analysis and computable general equilibrium models.

This subtopic analyzes regional imbalances in New Zealand's economy through empirical methods. Key studies cover infrastructure impacts (Cochrane et al., 2010, 39 citations) and housing cost variations (Grimes et al., 2005, 39 citations). Over 10 provided papers span 2002-2017 with 300+ total citations.

15
Curated Papers
3
Key Challenges

Why It Matters

Regional disparities drive policy for balanced growth and urban deconcentration in New Zealand. Cochrane et al. (2010) quantify infrastructure investments' spatial effects on productivity, informing targeted funding. Grimes et al. (2005) reveal rental cost variations disadvantaging larger households in rural areas, guiding housing subsidies. Pool (2002) links capital transfers to population shifts, supporting migration-based development strategies.

Key Research Challenges

Measuring Infrastructure Impacts

Quantifying local investments' spillover effects across regions remains difficult due to data granularity. Cochrane et al. (2010) use spatial econometrics but note endogeneity issues. Models often overlook long-term migration feedbacks.

Modeling Migration Patterns

Capturing bi-directional links between economic disparities and population movements challenges shift-share methods. Pool (2002) traces historical shifts but lacks dynamic projections. Recent data gaps hinder updates to 21st-century trends.

Indigenous Socio-Economic Gaps

Indexing relative outcomes for Indigenous populations varies by region, complicating policy targets. Biddle (2009) revisits indices but faces data inconsistencies across NZ and Australia. Integrating with productivity metrics is underdeveloped.

Essential Papers

1.

Measuring the economic impact of immigration: A scoping paper

Jacques Poot, William Cochrane · 2005 · Research Commons (University of Waikato) · 55 citations

This discussion paper has three objectives. Firstly, it provides a brief review of recent international empirical research on the labour market impact of immigration. The synthesis of this literatu...

2.

Ranking Regions-Revisiting an Index of Relative Indigenous Socio-Economic Outcomes

Nicholas Biddle · 2009 · ANU Open Research (Australian National University) · 53 citations

For any chance of success in achieving targets for improvement in Indigenous socio-economic outcomes, policy makers need to understand where relative and absolute need is greatest. To summarise the...

3.

A Bark But No Bite: Inequality and the 2014 New Zealand General Election

Jack Vowles, Hilde Coffé, Jennifer Curtin · 2017 · ANU Press eBooks · 42 citations

Based on New Zealand Election Study (NZES) data from a sample of 2,830 eligible voters, A Bark But No Bite explores a puzzle. While there was a lot of talk about inequality before the 2014 general ...

4.

The Spatial Impact of Local Infrastructural Investment in New Zealand

William Cochrane, Arthur Grimes, Philip McCann et al. · 2010 · SSRN Electronic Journal · 39 citations

5.

Regional Variation in Rental Costs for Larger Households

Arthur Grimes, Robert Sourell, Andrew Aitken et al. · 2005 · AgEcon Search (University of Minnesota, USA) · 39 citations

Housing costs comprise a major part of most household budgets. Larger households require greater space than do smaller households but do not necessarily have larger incomes. The cost of extra housi...

6.

Regional Change in the Economic Status of Indigenous Australians, 1986-91

John Taylor · 2018 · ANU Open Research (Australian National University) · 33 citations

7.

Transfers of Capital and Shifts in New Zealand's Regional Population Distribution, 1840-1996

Ian Pool · 2002 · Research Commons (University of Waikato) · 21 citations

When researchers attempt to study population and development, and particularly the role of migrations, the focus is normally on national level trends, frequently involving time-series analyses of m...

Reading Guide

Foundational Papers

Start with Poot and Cochrane (2005, 55 citations) for immigration baselines; Pool (2002, 21 citations) for historical migration; Cochrane et al. (2010, 39 citations) for infrastructure methods as they anchor empirical approaches.

Recent Advances

Vowles et al. (2017, 42 citations) on election inequality; Taylor (2018, 33 citations) updates indigenous regional status; Biddle (2009, 53 citations) refines outcome indices.

Core Methods

Shift-share for growth decomposition (Pool, 2002); spatial econometrics for investment effects (Cochrane et al., 2010); rental variation regressions (Grimes et al., 2005); socio-economic indexing (Biddle, 2009).

How PapersFlow Helps You Research Regional Economic Disparities New Zealand

Discover & Search

PapersFlow's Research Agent uses searchPapers and citationGraph to map core works like Cochrane et al. (2010) on infrastructure, revealing clusters around Grimes and Poot. exaSearch uncovers related NZ regional studies; findSimilarPapers extends to Pool (2002) migration analysis.

Analyze & Verify

Analysis Agent applies readPaperContent to extract shift-share decompositions from Cochrane et al. (2010), then verifyResponse with CoVe checks claims against raw data. runPythonAnalysis replicates Grimes et al. (2005) rental regressions using pandas for statistical verification; GRADE scores evidence strength on regional productivity claims.

Synthesize & Write

Synthesis Agent detects gaps in migration-infrastructure links across papers, flagging contradictions in indigenous indices (Biddle, 2009). Writing Agent uses latexEditText and latexSyncCitations to draft policy reports citing Poot and Cochrane; latexCompile generates figures, exportMermaid visualizes regional disparity flows.

Use Cases

"Replicate shift-share analysis from NZ infrastructure papers using Python."

Research Agent → searchPapers('shift-share New Zealand') → Analysis Agent → readPaperContent(Cochrane 2010) → runPythonAnalysis(pandas decomposition on extracted data) → matplotlib plot of regional productivity gaps.

"Draft LaTeX report on Auckland vs South Island disparities."

Research Agent → citationGraph(Grimes 2005, Pool 2002) → Synthesis → gap detection → Writing Agent → latexEditText(intro) → latexSyncCitations(10 papers) → latexCompile → PDF with disparity diagrams.

"Find code for NZ regional economic models from papers."

Research Agent → paperExtractUrls(Grimes et al. 2005) → Code Discovery → paperFindGithubRepo → githubRepoInspect → runPythonAnalysis(sample regional CGE model) → exportCsv(results).

Automated Workflows

Deep Research workflow scans 50+ papers via searchPapers on 'New Zealand regional disparities', chains to DeepScan for 7-step verification of Cochrane et al. (2010) claims, producing structured reports with GRADE scores. Theorizer generates hypotheses on infrastructure-migration feedbacks from Grimes and Pool papers. Chain-of-Verification/CoVe ensures response accuracy across regional datasets.

Frequently Asked Questions

What defines Regional Economic Disparities New Zealand?

It covers productivity gaps, migration, and infrastructure between Auckland and rural areas using shift-share and CGE models (Cochrane et al., 2010; Pool, 2002).

What are main methods used?

Shift-share analysis decomposes regional growth (Pool, 2002); spatial econometrics models infrastructure spillovers (Cochrane et al., 2010); indices rank indigenous outcomes (Biddle, 2009).

What are key papers?

Top cited: Poot and Cochrane (2005, 55 citations) on immigration impacts; Biddle (2009, 53 citations) on indigenous indices; Cochrane et al. (2010, 39 citations) on infrastructure.

What open problems exist?

Dynamic migration models integrating recent data; scaling indigenous indices to productivity gaps; endogeneity in infrastructure evaluations (Grimes et al., 2005; Biddle, 2009).

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