Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania
Romania is the fastest growing economy in the European Union (EU), and Bucharest and Romania’s secondary cities have been its main growth engines. However, while Bucharest has reached productivity levels comparable to those of other EU capitals, se...
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2017
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okr-10986-278742021-05-25T09:56:03Z Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania Cristea, Marius Mare, Codruța Moldovan, Ciprian China, Andreea-Mirela Farole, Thomas Vințan, Adina Park, Jane Garrett, Keith Patrick Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel CITIES MIGRATION URBAN EMPLOYMENT COMMUTING MAGNET CITIES Romania is the fastest growing economy in the European Union (EU), and Bucharest and Romania’s secondary cities have been its main growth engines. However, while Bucharest has reached productivity levels comparable to those of other EU capitals, secondary cities in Romania still have some ways to go before competing on equal footing with secondary cities in the EU. Without strengthening these secondary cities, the Romanian economy cannot sustain growth in the coming years. The most competitive secondary cities are those that are most astute at attracting people, investments, and tourists. This report looks at the cities that have been most successful at attracting migrants and commuters, and proposes a number of recommendations aimed at making secondary cities more attractive and competitive. The report is primarily addressed to policy makers and to a lay audience interested in urban development issues.This report is structured along four main sections: 1) An analysis of development dynamics, with a particular focus on the importance of cities in driving growth and development; 2) An analysis of migration and commuter patterns in Romania; 3) An analysis of the cities and areas that have been most successful at attracting people, and an analysis of the urban areas that will likely attract most people in the future. 4) Recommendations on how EU, national, and local policies and investments can help make secondary cities more competitive. 2017-08-15T20:54:30Z 2017-08-15T20:54:30Z 2017 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/327451497949480572/Magnet-cities-migration-and-commuting-in-Romania http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27874 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Bucharest Economic & Sector Work :: City Development Strategy Economic & Sector Work Europe and Central Asia Romania |
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Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
CITIES MIGRATION URBAN EMPLOYMENT COMMUTING MAGNET CITIES |
spellingShingle |
CITIES MIGRATION URBAN EMPLOYMENT COMMUTING MAGNET CITIES Cristea, Marius Mare, Codruța Moldovan, Ciprian China, Andreea-Mirela Farole, Thomas Vințan, Adina Park, Jane Garrett, Keith Patrick Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania |
geographic_facet |
Europe and Central Asia Romania |
description |
Romania is the fastest growing economy
in the European Union (EU), and Bucharest and Romania’s
secondary cities have been its main growth engines. However,
while Bucharest has reached productivity levels comparable
to those of other EU capitals, secondary cities in Romania
still have some ways to go before competing on equal footing
with secondary cities in the EU. Without strengthening these
secondary cities, the Romanian economy cannot sustain growth
in the coming years. The most competitive secondary cities
are those that are most astute at attracting people,
investments, and tourists. This report looks at the cities
that have been most successful at attracting migrants and
commuters, and proposes a number of recommendations aimed at
making secondary cities more attractive and competitive. The
report is primarily addressed to policy makers and to a lay
audience interested in urban development issues.This report
is structured along four main sections: 1) An analysis of
development dynamics, with a particular focus on the
importance of cities in driving growth and development; 2)
An analysis of migration and commuter patterns in Romania;
3) An analysis of the cities and areas that have been most
successful at attracting people, and an analysis of the
urban areas that will likely attract most people in the
future. 4) Recommendations on how EU, national, and local
policies and investments can help make secondary cities more competitive. |
format |
Report |
author |
Cristea, Marius Mare, Codruța Moldovan, Ciprian China, Andreea-Mirela Farole, Thomas Vințan, Adina Park, Jane Garrett, Keith Patrick Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel |
author_facet |
Cristea, Marius Mare, Codruța Moldovan, Ciprian China, Andreea-Mirela Farole, Thomas Vințan, Adina Park, Jane Garrett, Keith Patrick Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel |
author_sort |
Cristea, Marius |
title |
Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania |
title_short |
Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania |
title_full |
Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania |
title_fullStr |
Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania |
title_full_unstemmed |
Magnet Cities : Migration and Commuting in Romania |
title_sort |
magnet cities : migration and commuting in romania |
publisher |
World Bank, Bucharest |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/327451497949480572/Magnet-cities-migration-and-commuting-in-Romania http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27874 |
_version_ |
1764464826687422464 |