Albania Urban Sector Review
This report on Albania urban sector review focuses on trends and issues that have come to the fore with rapid urbanization and with the recent decentralization of major responsibilities to local governments. Continuing the achievements and addressi...
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Format: | Policy Note |
Language: | English en_US |
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Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/01/7965151/albania-urban-sector-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19622 |
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recordtype |
oai_dc |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ACCOUNTING AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES ASSETS AUTONOMY BANKS CAPITAL EXPENDITURES CITIES CITY SIZE COMMAND ECONOMY COMMUNITY BASED ORGANIZATIONS CONSTRUCTION CORPORATE INCOME TAX DECENTRALIZATION PROCESS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC SHOCKS ELECTRICITY EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION FISCAL REFORMS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HOUSING HOUSING DEMAND INCOME LAND DEVELOPMENT LAND PRICES LAND USE LARGE CITIES LAWS LEGISLATION LOCAL BUDGETS LOCAL CAPITAL EXPENDITURES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVENUE LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL LEVEL LOCAL REVENUE METROPOLITAN AREAS MIGRATION MUNICIPAL MUNICIPAL BUDGETS MUNICIPAL LEVEL MUNICIPAL REVENUE MUNICIPALITIES MUNICIPALITY POLITICAL AUTHORITY POVERTY REDUCTION PREFECTURES PRIVATE GOODS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROPERTY TAXES PROVISIONS PUBLIC PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC GOODS PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SPACES PUBLIC TRANSPORT PUBLIC WORKS REAL ESTATE MARKETS ROADS SECONDARY CITIES SETTLEMENT UPGRADING SETTLEMENTS SHELTER SOCIAL EXCLUSION SOCIAL SERVICES STATE OWNERSHIP STREETS SUBURBS TAX RATES TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRAFFIC CONGESTION TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT URBAN URBAN AREAS URBAN DESIGN URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN ECONOMIES URBAN ECONOMY URBAN GOVERNANCE URBAN GROWTH URBAN HOUSING URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN LAND URBAN LAND MANAGEMENT URBAN MANAGEMENT URBAN PLANNING URBAN PLANS URBAN POPULATION URBAN POVERTY URBAN SECTOR URBAN SERVICES URBANIZATION URBANIZATION PROCESS USER CHARGES UTILITIES VACANT LAND WATER SUPPLY |
spellingShingle |
ACCOUNTING AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES ASSETS AUTONOMY BANKS CAPITAL EXPENDITURES CITIES CITY SIZE COMMAND ECONOMY COMMUNITY BASED ORGANIZATIONS CONSTRUCTION CORPORATE INCOME TAX DECENTRALIZATION PROCESS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC SHOCKS ELECTRICITY EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION FISCAL REFORMS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HOUSING HOUSING DEMAND INCOME LAND DEVELOPMENT LAND PRICES LAND USE LARGE CITIES LAWS LEGISLATION LOCAL BUDGETS LOCAL CAPITAL EXPENDITURES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVENUE LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL LEVEL LOCAL REVENUE METROPOLITAN AREAS MIGRATION MUNICIPAL MUNICIPAL BUDGETS MUNICIPAL LEVEL MUNICIPAL REVENUE MUNICIPALITIES MUNICIPALITY POLITICAL AUTHORITY POVERTY REDUCTION PREFECTURES PRIVATE GOODS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROPERTY TAXES PROVISIONS PUBLIC PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC GOODS PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SPACES PUBLIC TRANSPORT PUBLIC WORKS REAL ESTATE MARKETS ROADS SECONDARY CITIES SETTLEMENT UPGRADING SETTLEMENTS SHELTER SOCIAL EXCLUSION SOCIAL SERVICES STATE OWNERSHIP STREETS SUBURBS TAX RATES TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRAFFIC CONGESTION TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT URBAN URBAN AREAS URBAN DESIGN URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN ECONOMIES URBAN ECONOMY URBAN GOVERNANCE URBAN GROWTH URBAN HOUSING URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN LAND URBAN LAND MANAGEMENT URBAN MANAGEMENT URBAN PLANNING URBAN PLANS URBAN POPULATION URBAN POVERTY URBAN SECTOR URBAN SERVICES URBANIZATION URBANIZATION PROCESS USER CHARGES UTILITIES VACANT LAND WATER SUPPLY World Bank Albania Urban Sector Review |
geographic_facet |
Europe and Central Asia ALBANIA |
description |
This report on Albania urban sector
review focuses on trends and issues that have come to the
fore with rapid urbanization and with the recent
decentralization of major responsibilities to local
governments. Continuing the achievements and addressing the
problems will require actions by local governments and, just
as importantly, by the central government, which sets the
legal and regulatory conditions for local governance and the
tone of political leadership. The major challenges facing
both levels of government include: 1) restoring a better
balance between public goods and private goods, and between
public interests and private interests, as demonstrated in
urban management and land use; 2) devising and implementing
a form of urban planning and regulation that serves the
urban economy and the demands for commercial and household
real estate, and can be enforced; 3) making local
governments more effective managers of cities, with
sustainable financing. This implies that the private sector
is enabled and not hampered by avoidable problems with local
infrastructure services, or by unnecessary regulations or
fiscal impositions; and 4) helping the citizens who remain
relatively disadvantaged to continue improving their
welfare, including their housing assets, in the urban
location. The study concludes that the dramatic
transformations Albania has experienced since the transition
have had very clear spatial dimensions. The increased
concentrations of population settlement and of economic
activity have brought about improvements in welfare for both
the urban residents and for the communities sending
migrants. The geographic pattern of Albania's economy
is strong and apparently becoming more established, as the
Tirana/Durres metropolitan region will likely remain the
economic center of gravity. Urban growth will continue but
at a measured pace, as Albania's urbanization rate
approaches levels seen elsewhere in Europe. National
development strategies and policies, including policies to
strengthen and improve the investment climate experienced by
firms in each city, should therefore acknowledge and work
with these spatial realities. |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Albania Urban Sector Review |
title_short |
Albania Urban Sector Review |
title_full |
Albania Urban Sector Review |
title_fullStr |
Albania Urban Sector Review |
title_full_unstemmed |
Albania Urban Sector Review |
title_sort |
albania urban sector review |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/01/7965151/albania-urban-sector-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19622 |
_version_ |
1764441261192773632 |
spelling |
okr-10986-196222021-04-23T14:03:46Z Albania Urban Sector Review World Bank ACCOUNTING AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES ASSETS AUTONOMY BANKS CAPITAL EXPENDITURES CITIES CITY SIZE COMMAND ECONOMY COMMUNITY BASED ORGANIZATIONS CONSTRUCTION CORPORATE INCOME TAX DECENTRALIZATION PROCESS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC SHOCKS ELECTRICITY EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION FISCAL REFORMS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HOUSING HOUSING DEMAND INCOME LAND DEVELOPMENT LAND PRICES LAND USE LARGE CITIES LAWS LEGISLATION LOCAL BUDGETS LOCAL CAPITAL EXPENDITURES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVENUE LOCAL GOVERNMENT REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL LEVEL LOCAL REVENUE METROPOLITAN AREAS MIGRATION MUNICIPAL MUNICIPAL BUDGETS MUNICIPAL LEVEL MUNICIPAL REVENUE MUNICIPALITIES MUNICIPALITY POLITICAL AUTHORITY POVERTY REDUCTION PREFECTURES PRIVATE GOODS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROPERTY TAXES PROVISIONS PUBLIC PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC GOODS PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SPACES PUBLIC TRANSPORT PUBLIC WORKS REAL ESTATE MARKETS ROADS SECONDARY CITIES SETTLEMENT UPGRADING SETTLEMENTS SHELTER SOCIAL EXCLUSION SOCIAL SERVICES STATE OWNERSHIP STREETS SUBURBS TAX RATES TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRAFFIC CONGESTION TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPORT URBAN URBAN AREAS URBAN DESIGN URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN ECONOMIES URBAN ECONOMY URBAN GOVERNANCE URBAN GROWTH URBAN HOUSING URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN LAND URBAN LAND MANAGEMENT URBAN MANAGEMENT URBAN PLANNING URBAN PLANS URBAN POPULATION URBAN POVERTY URBAN SECTOR URBAN SERVICES URBANIZATION URBANIZATION PROCESS USER CHARGES UTILITIES VACANT LAND WATER SUPPLY This report on Albania urban sector review focuses on trends and issues that have come to the fore with rapid urbanization and with the recent decentralization of major responsibilities to local governments. Continuing the achievements and addressing the problems will require actions by local governments and, just as importantly, by the central government, which sets the legal and regulatory conditions for local governance and the tone of political leadership. The major challenges facing both levels of government include: 1) restoring a better balance between public goods and private goods, and between public interests and private interests, as demonstrated in urban management and land use; 2) devising and implementing a form of urban planning and regulation that serves the urban economy and the demands for commercial and household real estate, and can be enforced; 3) making local governments more effective managers of cities, with sustainable financing. This implies that the private sector is enabled and not hampered by avoidable problems with local infrastructure services, or by unnecessary regulations or fiscal impositions; and 4) helping the citizens who remain relatively disadvantaged to continue improving their welfare, including their housing assets, in the urban location. The study concludes that the dramatic transformations Albania has experienced since the transition have had very clear spatial dimensions. The increased concentrations of population settlement and of economic activity have brought about improvements in welfare for both the urban residents and for the communities sending migrants. The geographic pattern of Albania's economy is strong and apparently becoming more established, as the Tirana/Durres metropolitan region will likely remain the economic center of gravity. Urban growth will continue but at a measured pace, as Albania's urbanization rate approaches levels seen elsewhere in Europe. National development strategies and policies, including policies to strengthen and improve the investment climate experienced by firms in each city, should therefore acknowledge and work with these spatial realities. 2014-08-21T22:16:03Z 2014-08-21T22:16:03Z 2007-01-19 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/01/7965151/albania-urban-sector-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19622 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note Economic & Sector Work Europe and Central Asia ALBANIA |