
Diana Gutierrez PosadaUniversity of Oviedo | UNIOVI · Department of Applied Economics
Diana Gutierrez Posada
PhD Economics
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Publications
Publications (19)
We examine links between creative activity and gentrification at the neighbourhood level. These dynamics are both complex and important to understand. Artists may help 'upgrade' inexpensive neighbourhoods before being displaced, including by higher-paid creative service workers. Alternatively, creative activity may follow patterns of high-income cu...
Economic geographers have paid much attention to the cultural and creative industries, both for their propensity to cluster in urban settings, and their potential to drive urban economic development. However, evidence on the latter is surprisingly sparse. In this article, we explore the long-term, causal impacts of the cultural and creative industr...
Economic geographers have paid much attention to the cultural and creative industries, both for their propensity to cluster in urban settings, and their potential to drive urban economic development. However, evidence on the latter is surprisingly sparse. In this paper we explore the long-term, causal impacts of the cultural and creative industries...
Despite seven decades of development of the European Union project, on June 22, 2016, the United Kingdom, Europe and the rest of the world were surprised when the Leave campaign won the Brexit referendum, offering an extraordinary case study for researchers. We spatially disaggregate the vote share data, which allows us to explore where anti‐Europe...
Economic geographers have paid much attention to the cultural and creative industries, both for their propensity to cluster in urban settings, and their potential to drive urban economic development. However, evidence on the latter is surprisingly sparse. In this paper we explore the long-term, causal impacts of the cultural and creative industries...
The creative industries have received much attention from economic geographers and others, both for their propensity to co-locate in urban settings and their potential to drive urban economic development. However, evidence on the latter is surprisingly sparse. In this paper we explore the long-term, causal impacts of the creative industries on surr...
The creative industries have received much attention from economic geographers and others, both for their propensity to co-locate in urban settings and their potential to drive urban economic development. However, evidence on the latter is surprisingly sparse. In this paper we explore the long-term, causal impacts of the creative industries on surr...
This paper examines the heterogeneous effect of student spending in UK NUTS-2 regions. Impact analyses of the more than £45 billion students spend each year have so far been agnostic of the regional absorptive capacity to benefit from this expenditure. Building a multi-regional input–output model for the UK and combining it with data on student exp...
The rise in second homes in recent decades is an interesting phenomenon, especially from a tourism perspective. The main motivations behind the purchase of a second dwelling are compensation (supplementing needs for preferences not covered by the primary home), lifecycle events (return or retirement migration) and affluence (real estate investment)...
The objective of this work is to study employment growth and its determinants in Spain at a high degree of spatial disaggregation. The impossibility of obtaining GDP data at the local scale makes this a particularly interesting issue, as employment growth can be used as a proxy for local economic growth—and can therefore be expected to provide some...
In the 2000s, and with natural population growth rates close to zero, Spain experienced an inflow of almost 5 million immigrants. These new Spanish residents did not tend to locate evenly across the territory and contributed to putting pressure on the already large spatial population imbalances between cities and rural areas, between the coast and...
During the last two decades, the Spanish economy has been growing both in terms of employment and economic activity, and the spatial distribution of both is very uneven. At a high level of disaggregation, when observing figures of local employment growth we find major changes between 1991 and 2001 and 2001–2011 decades. The aim of this paper is to...
The original version of this article unfortunately contained a mistake. The maps on the right-hand side in Fig. 1 have the wrong titles. NUTS 2 regions should be Local Labour Markets. © 2018 Springer Science+Business Media B.V., part of Springer Nature
Spain is an ageing country, and the present demographic burden is not homogeneously distributed across space. Will the aged population be evenly distributed in the future, or will disparities broaden over time? Identifying the spatial patterns of the aged population concentration and the existence of a demographic burden convergence/divergence proc...
Urban wage premium is defined as the wage gap favouring workers located in the larger metropolises of a country. Glaeser and Maré (2001) or Gould (2007) identified that the wage differential between the larger urban areas in the United States and the rest of the urban system can reach 30%. There are few studies for the Spanish case, but recently De...
El libro recoge un conjunto de aportaciones novedosas de profesores universitarios, de los cuatro puntos cardinales de España, agrupados en cuatro ámbitos básicos: política económica, economía regional, economía de los servicios y economía española y europea, que rinden homenaje a la labor docente e investigadora del profesor Juan Ramón Cuadrado Ro...
Formal modeling of local population growth has usually tended to focus on identifying patterns that are presumed to hold universally. However, as Glaeser, Ponzetto, and Tobio highlighted, these laws are reliable for long-term dynamics; but in some moments or for some places, the balance between the different factors may change, giving rise to diffe...