Urban and regional economics corvina logo

Szerző: McCann, Philip
Cím: Urban and regional economics
Megjelenési adatok: Oxford University Press, Oxford - New York, 2001. | ISBN: 0-19-877645-4

coverimage I would like to acknowledge the support of my colleagues in the Departments of Economics and Geography at the University of Reading, during the period in which this book took shape. In particular, I extend my thanks to Abi Swinburn for all of her help in the latter stages of compiling the manuscript. Half of the book was also written while I was at the Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Japan. I am very grateful to Masayuki Doi and Noboru Sakashita for giving me the time and space to pursue my own writing. The book has benefited from the many discussions I have had with a wide range of people and I am grateful to each of them for their insights. I would like to thank the staff of Oxford University Press for their commitment to this book and their skilled assistance. Finally, I would like to thank my wife Clare without whose continuing encouragement, love, and support this book would not have been written. (...) All economic phenomena take place within geographical space. Economic issues invariably involve either questions concerning the place specificity of particular activities, or alternatively questions relating to the overcoming of space and geographical distance. For example, all commodities are traded at various market locations. However, in order to reach the appropriate market locations, goods have to be transported and delivered across space. Similarly, service activities take place at particular locations, and the information required to carry out the activity must be transmitted or acquired across geographical space. In each case, the costs incurred in these spatial transactions will themselves partly determine the price and cost conditions at each market location. Yet, the reasons why particular markets are located at particular places are also economic questions, and as we will see in this book, the nature and behaviour of markets depends somewhat on their locations. Market performance therefore partly depends on geography. At the same time, the economic performance of a particular area also depends on the nature and performance of the various markets located within the area. Acknowledging that geography plays a role in determining economic behaviour, many discussions about the performance of particular local, urban, or regional economies are, in fact, fundamentally questions about the relationships between geography and the economy. Geography and economics are usually interrelated issues. For many years, spatial questions have all too often been ignored by economists and economic policy makers. This is partly a problem of education. In most textbook discussions, the whole economic system is assumed to take place on a pinhead (Isard 1956). While for a long time there have been many urban economists, regional scientists, and economic geographers who have been explicitly concerned with spatial economic phenomena, for many years the majority of geographical issues were subsumed by Ricardian theories of comparative advantage and international trade. In the post-war Bretton-Woods world of relatively closed economies and currency convertibility restrictions, such assumptions may have appeared to many economists to be acceptable.
Kategóriák: Közgazdaságtudomány
Tárgyszavak: Ipar, Gazdaság, English, Angol, Régió, Economics, Region, Industrial
Formátum: OCR szöveg
Típus: könyv

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Tartalomjegyzék

Book cover
Title page
Copyright/impressum
Acknowledgements
VII
Contents
IX-XI
List of Figures
XII-XIV
List of Tables
XV
Introduction
1-5
Chapter 1: Industrial Location: The Location of the Firm in Theory
6-52
   1.1. Introduction to Classical and Neoclassical Models of Location
6-7
   1.2. The Weber Location-Production Model
7-19
      1.2.1. The location effect of input transport costs
10-11
      1.2.2. The location effect of output transport costs
11-12
      1.2.3. The location effect of varying factor prices
12-16
      1.2.4. The locational effect of new input sources and new markets
16-19
   1.3. The Moses Location-Production Model
19-26
      1.3.1. The logistics-costs model
26
   1.4. Market Area Analysis: Spatial Monopoly Power
27-35
      1.4.1. The hotelling model of spatial competition
30-35
   1.5. Behavioural Theories of Firm Location
35-40
   1.6. Conclusions
40-41
   Appendix 1.1. The One-Dimension Location Problem
41-46
   Appendix 1.2. The General Solution to the Weber-Moses Problem
46-47
   Appendix 1.3. The Logistics-Costs Location-Production Model
48-50
   Appendix 1.4. The Hotelling Location Game
50-52
Chapter 2: The Spatial Distribution of Activities
53-92
   2.1. Introduction
53-54
   2.2. Industrial Clustering: Returns to Scale and Geography
54-55
   2.3. Agglomeration Economies
55-60
      2.3.1. The sources of agglomeration economies
55-57
         Information spillovers
56
         Non-traded local inputs
56-57
         Local skilled-labour pool
57
      2.3.2. The types of agglomeration economies
57-60
         Internal returns to scale
58
         Economies of localization
58
         Economies of urbanization
58-60
   2.4. Other Descriptions of Industrial Clusters
60-63
      2.4.1. The growth pole model
60-61
      2.4.2. The incubator model
61
      2.4.3. The product-cycle model
61-62
      2.4.4. The Porter model
62
      2.4.5. The new industrial areas model
63
   2.5. Clusters, Firm Types, and the Nature of Transactions
63-66
   2.6. Industrial Dispersal
66-71
      2.6.1. Spatial pricing, price discrimination, and firm dispersal
67
      2.6.2. Linkage analysis and product value/weight ratios
67-69
      2.6.3. Reilly's Law of market areas
69-71
   2.7. Urban Hierarchies and Central Place Theory
71-78
      2.7.1. The Cristaller approach to central places
72-73
      2.7.2. The Losch aprroach to central places
73-78
   2.8. The Empirical Description of the Urban System: The Rank-Size Rule
78-81
   2.9. Measuring Spatial Concentration and Regional Diversification
81-83
   2.10. Conclusions
83
   Appendix 2.1. Spatial Monopoly and Price Discrimination
84-85
   Appendix 2.2. The Derivation of Reilly’s Law
86
   Appendix 2.3. The Krugman-Fujita Model
86-90
   Appendix 2.4. The Loschian Demand Function
91-92
Chapter 3: The Spatial Structure of the Urban Economy
93-136
   3.1. Introduction
93-94
   3.2. The von Thunen Model
94-99
      3.2.1. Land competition in the von Thunen model
98-99
   3.3. The Bid-Rent Model for a Firm
100-107
      3.3.1. Land competition in the industry bid-rent model
103-107
   3.4. The Bid-Rent Model for a Residential Household
107-115
      3.4.1. Land competition in the household bid-rent model
109-113
      3.4.2. The treatment of environment in the household bid-rent model
113-115
   3.5. Alternative Explanations of the Convex Relationship between Land Prices and Distance
115-119
      3.5.1. Urban growth, property asset appreciation, and land price-distance convexity
116-119
      3.5.2. Trip frequency
119
   3.6. Critiques of Urban Economic Models
120-124
      3.6.1. Monocentricity
120-121
      3.6.2. Land supply and land ownership
121-123
      3.6.3. The optimal size of a city
123-124
   3.7. Conclusions
124
   Appendix 3.1. The Slope of the Rent Gradient in the Von Thunen model
125-127
      Appendix 3.1.1. Distance to the Edge of the Von Thunen Area of Cultivation
126
      Appendix 3.1.2. Distance to a Change of Land Use in the Von Thunen Model
126-127
   Appendix 3.2. The Slope of the Bid-Rent Curve
127-131
      Appendix 3.2.1. The Relative Income Elasticities of the Demand for Land and Accessibility in the Bid-Rent Model
130
      Appendix 3.2.2. Environmental Changes and Bid-Rent Analysis
131
   Appendix 3.3. Land Purchase Price-Distance Convexity
131-135
      Appendix 3.3.1. Property Asset Appreciation and Land-Price Distance Convexity: the Role of Urban Spatial Growth
132-133
      Appendix 3.3.2. Property Asset Appreciation and Land-Price Distance Convexity: the Role of Income Growth in a Spatially Constrained City
133-135
   Appendix 3.4. Optimum Trip Frequency and Rent-Gradient Convexity
135-136
Chapter 4: Regional Specialization, Trade, and Multiplier Analysis
137-174
   4.1. Introduction
137-139
   4.2. The Economic Base Model
139-142
   4.3. Identifying the Basic and Non-Basic Sectors
143-149
      4.3.1. The assumptions method
143
      4.3.2. Location quotients
144-146
      4.3.3. Minimum requirements approach
146-147
      4.3.4. Choosing between the alternative economic base approaches
148-149
   4.4. Keynesian Regional Multiplier
149-154
   4.5. Comparing the Economic Base and Keynesian Regional Multipliers
154-155
   4.6. Impact Analysis
156-158
   4.7. Regional Input-Output Analysis
158-163
      4.7.1. Additional comments on regional input-output analysis
161-163
   4.8. Conclusions
163-164
   Appendix 4.1. The Simple Static and Dynamic Keynesian Multiplier Models
165-166
   Appendix 4.2. The Relationship between the Alternative Forms and Uses of Location Quotients in the Construction of Regional Input-Output Tables
166-172
      Appendix 4.2.1. Estimating Regional Trade Using Location Quotients where an Updated National Input-Output Table is not Available
166-170
      Appendix 4.2.2. Constructing Regional Input-Output Table by Adjusting National Tables
170-172
   Appendix 4.3. The General Solution to the Input-Output Model
173-174
Chapter 5: Regional and Inter-Regional Labour Market Analysis
175-207
   5.1. Introduction
175-176
   5.2. Wages and Labour Markets
176-182
      5.2.1. A neoclassical approach
176-181
      5.2.2. A Keynesian Approach
181-182
   5.3. Regional Labour Markets, Wage Flexibility, and Capital Utilization
182-185
   5.4. Regional Labour Market Adjustment
185-191
      5.4.1. Regional capital adjustment
188-191
   5.5. Wages and Inter-Regional Labour Migration
191-202
      5.5.1. The disequilibrium model of inter-regional labour migration
192-196
      5.5.2. The equilibrium model of inter-regional labour migration
196-197
      5.5.3. The endogenous human-capital model of migration
197-200
      5.5.4. Additional comments on wages and migration
200-202
   5.6. Non-Wage-Related Models of Inter-Regional Migration
202-204
      5.6.1. The gravity model of migration
202-204
      5.6.2. The life-cycle model of migration
204
   5.7. Conclusions
204-205
   Appendix 5.1. The Model of Human Capital
206-207
Chapter 6: Regional Growth, Factor Allocation, and Balance of Payments
208-242
   6.1. Introduction
208-209
   6.2. Neoclassical Regional Growth
209-221
      6.2.1. The one-sector model of regional factor allocation and migration
210-214
      6.2.2. The two-sector model of regional factor allocation and migration
214-217
      6.2.3. The relationship between the one-sector and two-sector regional models
218-221
   6.3. Regional Growth Accounting and Production Function Analysis
222-228
      6.3.1. Regional technology and endogenous growth
224-228
   6.4. Keynesian Perspectives on Regional Growth and Balance of Payments
228-239
      6.4.1. The balance of payments approach to regional growth
229-235
      6.4.2. The Verdoorn Law and cumulative growth
235-239
   6.5. Conclusions
239-242
      Appendix 6.1. The Cobb-Douglas Production Function and Growth Accounting
240-241
      Appendix 6.2. Proof of the Relationship between Wage Growth and Labour Productivitiy Growth in the Cobb-Douglas Framework
241-242
Chapter 7 Urban and Regional Economic Policy Analysis
243-267
   7.1. Introduction
243-245
   7.2. Urban Policy
245-257
      7.2.1. Urban zoning policies
246-249
      7.2.2. Urban regeneration policies
249-253
      7.2.3. Gentrification
254
      7.2.4. Greenbelts
254-257
   7.3. Regional Policy
257-266
      7.3.1. The aggregate microeconomic effects of regional policies
258-260
      7.3.2. The welfare effects of regional policy
260-263
      7.3.3. The marcoeconomic effects of regional policy
263-266
   7.4. Conclusions
266-267
Bibliography
269-276
Index
277-286
Rear book cover