Urbanization and the Geography of Development
This paper focuses on several interrelated key questions on the geography of development. Although we herald cities with their industrial bases as 'engines of growth,' does industrialization in fact drive urbanization?1 What economic acti...
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/11/18868785/urbanization-geography-development http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17588 |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
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English en_US |
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ACCESS TO CAPITAL ACCOUNTING AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES AIRCRAFT AUTOMOBILE AUTOMOBILE PRODUCTION AUTOMOBILES BANK PRIVATIZATION BARRIOS BIG CITIES BUSINESS SERVICES CAPITAL CITIES CAPITAL MARKETS CAPITALS CARS CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT CITIES CITY DEVELOPMENT CITY DISTRICTS CITY INDUSTRIES CITY LEADERS CITY PLANNING CITY PRODUCTIVITY CITY SIZE COMMERCIAL BANKS COMPANY TOWNS COST OF TRANSPORT DECENTRALIZATION DIESEL DIESEL FUEL ELASTICITY ELASTICITY OF VEHICLE TRAVEL EXTERNALITIES FACTORING FINANCIAL SERVICES FISCAL AUTONOMY FUEL FUEL PRICES HIGH TRANSPORT HIGHWAY HIGHWAYS HOUSING IMPACT OF TRANSPORT INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE INDUSTRIALIZATION INDUSTRIALIZATION PROCESS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INSPECTION INSURANCE INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS LABOR COSTS LABOR MARKETS LAND DEVELOPMENT LAND MARKETS LAND TITLING LARGE CITIES LAWS LEVEL PLAYING FIELD LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL PUBLIC SECTOR MARKET DISCIPLINE MEGACITIES METROPOLITAN AREAS MOBILITY MONIES NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM NATURAL RESOURCES NEIGHBORHOODS NET LOSSES POPULATION GROWTH PRICE CHANGE PRIVATE BANKS PRIVATE VENDORS PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC DEBT PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SERVICE PROVISION PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC UTILITIES QUALITY OF LIFE RAIL RAIL NODES RAIL TRANSPORT RAILWAY RAILWAYS REAL ESTATE MARKETS REGIONAL BANKS REGULATORY SYSTEMS REORGANIZATION RING ROADS ROAD ROAD NETWORK SERVICE CENTERS SERVICE PROVISION SOCIAL TENSION SPRAWL SUBURBAN AREAS SUBURBAN RAIL SUBURBS TAX TENURE SECURITY TOWN GOVERNMENTS TOWNS TRADE FLOWS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TRANSPORT ACCESS TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORT INVESTMENT TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS TRANSPORT SERVICES TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE TRAVEL COSTS UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN URBAN AREAS URBAN BIAS URBAN CENTERS URBAN CONCENTRATION URBAN CONGESTION URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN ECONOMICS URBAN ENVIRONMENTS URBAN FRINGE URBAN GROWTH URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN LAND URBAN MIGRATION URBAN POPULATION URBAN POPULATION GROWTH URBAN RESEARCH URBAN SECTOR URBAN SPRAWL URBAN STRUCTURE URBAN TRANSFORMATION URBANIZATION URBANIZATION PROCESS VEHICLE VEHICLE TRAVEL COSTS |
spellingShingle |
ACCESS TO CAPITAL ACCOUNTING AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES AIRCRAFT AUTOMOBILE AUTOMOBILE PRODUCTION AUTOMOBILES BANK PRIVATIZATION BARRIOS BIG CITIES BUSINESS SERVICES CAPITAL CITIES CAPITAL MARKETS CAPITALS CARS CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT CITIES CITY DEVELOPMENT CITY DISTRICTS CITY INDUSTRIES CITY LEADERS CITY PLANNING CITY PRODUCTIVITY CITY SIZE COMMERCIAL BANKS COMPANY TOWNS COST OF TRANSPORT DECENTRALIZATION DIESEL DIESEL FUEL ELASTICITY ELASTICITY OF VEHICLE TRAVEL EXTERNALITIES FACTORING FINANCIAL SERVICES FISCAL AUTONOMY FUEL FUEL PRICES HIGH TRANSPORT HIGHWAY HIGHWAYS HOUSING IMPACT OF TRANSPORT INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE INDUSTRIALIZATION INDUSTRIALIZATION PROCESS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INSPECTION INSURANCE INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS LABOR COSTS LABOR MARKETS LAND DEVELOPMENT LAND MARKETS LAND TITLING LARGE CITIES LAWS LEVEL PLAYING FIELD LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL PUBLIC SECTOR MARKET DISCIPLINE MEGACITIES METROPOLITAN AREAS MOBILITY MONIES NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM NATURAL RESOURCES NEIGHBORHOODS NET LOSSES POPULATION GROWTH PRICE CHANGE PRIVATE BANKS PRIVATE VENDORS PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC DEBT PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SERVICE PROVISION PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC UTILITIES QUALITY OF LIFE RAIL RAIL NODES RAIL TRANSPORT RAILWAY RAILWAYS REAL ESTATE MARKETS REGIONAL BANKS REGULATORY SYSTEMS REORGANIZATION RING ROADS ROAD ROAD NETWORK SERVICE CENTERS SERVICE PROVISION SOCIAL TENSION SPRAWL SUBURBAN AREAS SUBURBAN RAIL SUBURBS TAX TENURE SECURITY TOWN GOVERNMENTS TOWNS TRADE FLOWS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TRANSPORT ACCESS TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORT INVESTMENT TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS TRANSPORT SERVICES TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE TRAVEL COSTS UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN URBAN AREAS URBAN BIAS URBAN CENTERS URBAN CONCENTRATION URBAN CONGESTION URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN ECONOMICS URBAN ENVIRONMENTS URBAN FRINGE URBAN GROWTH URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN LAND URBAN MIGRATION URBAN POPULATION URBAN POPULATION GROWTH URBAN RESEARCH URBAN SECTOR URBAN SPRAWL URBAN STRUCTURE URBAN TRANSFORMATION URBANIZATION URBANIZATION PROCESS VEHICLE VEHICLE TRAVEL COSTS Henderson, J. Vernon Urbanization and the Geography of Development |
description |
This paper focuses on several
interrelated key questions on the geography of development.
Although we herald cities with their industrial bases as
'engines of growth,' does industrialization in
fact drive urbanization?1 What economic activities do cities
of different sizes undertake? Does this change as countries
develop? If so, what are the policy implications? Do
development policies have a big-city bias? If so, what does
this imply for growth and inequality, and what are
appropriate place-based policies? Should countries have
policies concerning optimal city sizes or city-size
distributions? Urbanization is central to the development
process. Employment shifts out of agriculture into industry,
and industrial production proceeds most effectively in
cities, with their agglomeration economies. Cities are thus
viewed as engines of growth. While such relationships appear
in the data, the process is not straightforward. Among
developing countries, changes in income or industrialization
correlate only weakly with changes in urbanization. This
suggests that policy and institutional factors may also
influence the urbanization process, weakening the link
between industrialization and urbanization. The relationship
between industrialization and urbanization is absent in
Sub-Saharan Africa. Finally, the author will look at city
sizes and city-size distributions. Factors determining both
aspects are complex and poorly understood. It is hard to be
proscriptive about either individual city sizes or overall
city-size distributions. The best policies strengthen
institutions in the relevant markets so that market forces
can move the economy toward better outcomes. That said, the
role of public-private interaction and the details of what
institutional reforms different situations require are controversial. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Working Paper |
author |
Henderson, J. Vernon |
author_facet |
Henderson, J. Vernon |
author_sort |
Henderson, J. Vernon |
title |
Urbanization and the Geography of Development |
title_short |
Urbanization and the Geography of Development |
title_full |
Urbanization and the Geography of Development |
title_fullStr |
Urbanization and the Geography of Development |
title_full_unstemmed |
Urbanization and the Geography of Development |
title_sort |
urbanization and the geography of development |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/11/18868785/urbanization-geography-development http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17588 |
_version_ |
1764437912091361280 |
spelling |
okr-10986-175882021-04-23T14:03:39Z Urbanization and the Geography of Development Henderson, J. Vernon ACCESS TO CAPITAL ACCOUNTING AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES AIRCRAFT AUTOMOBILE AUTOMOBILE PRODUCTION AUTOMOBILES BANK PRIVATIZATION BARRIOS BIG CITIES BUSINESS SERVICES CAPITAL CITIES CAPITAL MARKETS CAPITALS CARS CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT CITIES CITY DEVELOPMENT CITY DISTRICTS CITY INDUSTRIES CITY LEADERS CITY PLANNING CITY PRODUCTIVITY CITY SIZE COMMERCIAL BANKS COMPANY TOWNS COST OF TRANSPORT DECENTRALIZATION DIESEL DIESEL FUEL ELASTICITY ELASTICITY OF VEHICLE TRAVEL EXTERNALITIES FACTORING FINANCIAL SERVICES FISCAL AUTONOMY FUEL FUEL PRICES HIGH TRANSPORT HIGHWAY HIGHWAYS HOUSING IMPACT OF TRANSPORT INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE INDUSTRIALIZATION INDUSTRIALIZATION PROCESS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INSPECTION INSURANCE INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS LABOR COSTS LABOR MARKETS LAND DEVELOPMENT LAND MARKETS LAND TITLING LARGE CITIES LAWS LEVEL PLAYING FIELD LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL PUBLIC SECTOR MARKET DISCIPLINE MEGACITIES METROPOLITAN AREAS MOBILITY MONIES NATIONAL HIGHWAY SYSTEM NATURAL RESOURCES NEIGHBORHOODS NET LOSSES POPULATION GROWTH PRICE CHANGE PRIVATE BANKS PRIVATE VENDORS PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC DEBT PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SERVICE PROVISION PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC UTILITIES QUALITY OF LIFE RAIL RAIL NODES RAIL TRANSPORT RAILWAY RAILWAYS REAL ESTATE MARKETS REGIONAL BANKS REGULATORY SYSTEMS REORGANIZATION RING ROADS ROAD ROAD NETWORK SERVICE CENTERS SERVICE PROVISION SOCIAL TENSION SPRAWL SUBURBAN AREAS SUBURBAN RAIL SUBURBS TAX TENURE SECURITY TOWN GOVERNMENTS TOWNS TRADE FLOWS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TRANSPORT ACCESS TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORT INVESTMENT TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS TRANSPORT SERVICES TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE TRAVEL COSTS UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN URBAN AREAS URBAN BIAS URBAN CENTERS URBAN CONCENTRATION URBAN CONGESTION URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN ECONOMICS URBAN ENVIRONMENTS URBAN FRINGE URBAN GROWTH URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN LAND URBAN MIGRATION URBAN POPULATION URBAN POPULATION GROWTH URBAN RESEARCH URBAN SECTOR URBAN SPRAWL URBAN STRUCTURE URBAN TRANSFORMATION URBANIZATION URBANIZATION PROCESS VEHICLE VEHICLE TRAVEL COSTS This paper focuses on several interrelated key questions on the geography of development. Although we herald cities with their industrial bases as 'engines of growth,' does industrialization in fact drive urbanization?1 What economic activities do cities of different sizes undertake? Does this change as countries develop? If so, what are the policy implications? Do development policies have a big-city bias? If so, what does this imply for growth and inequality, and what are appropriate place-based policies? Should countries have policies concerning optimal city sizes or city-size distributions? Urbanization is central to the development process. Employment shifts out of agriculture into industry, and industrial production proceeds most effectively in cities, with their agglomeration economies. Cities are thus viewed as engines of growth. While such relationships appear in the data, the process is not straightforward. Among developing countries, changes in income or industrialization correlate only weakly with changes in urbanization. This suggests that policy and institutional factors may also influence the urbanization process, weakening the link between industrialization and urbanization. The relationship between industrialization and urbanization is absent in Sub-Saharan Africa. Finally, the author will look at city sizes and city-size distributions. Factors determining both aspects are complex and poorly understood. It is hard to be proscriptive about either individual city sizes or overall city-size distributions. The best policies strengthen institutions in the relevant markets so that market forces can move the economy toward better outcomes. That said, the role of public-private interaction and the details of what institutional reforms different situations require are controversial. 2014-04-02T19:38:45Z 2014-04-02T19:38:45Z 2013-11 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/11/18868785/urbanization-geography-development http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17588 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research |