Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis

Recent empirical work suggests that there are large agglomeration gains from working and living in developing country cities. These estimates find that doubling city size is associated with an increase in productivity by 19 percent in China, 12 per...

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Main Authors: Grover, Arti, Lall, Somik V., Timmis, Jonathan
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/749721626709072349/Agglomeration-Economies-in-Developing-Countries-A-Meta-Analysis
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36003
id okr-10986-36003
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-360032021-07-23T05:11:15Z Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis Grover, Arti Lall, Somik V. Timmis, Jonathan AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES META-ANALYSIS PRODUCTIVITY Recent empirical work suggests that there are large agglomeration gains from working and living in developing country cities. These estimates find that doubling city size is associated with an increase in productivity by 19 percent in China, 12 percent in India, and 17 percent in Africa. These agglomeration benefits are considerably higher relative to developed country cities, which are in the range of 4 to 6 percent. However, many developing country cities are costly, crowded, and disconnected, and face slow structural transformation. To understand the true productivity advantages of cities in developing countries, this paper systematically evaluates more than 1,200 elasticity estimates from 70 studies in 33 countries. Using a frontier methodology for conducting meta-analysis, it finds that the elasticity estimates in developing countries are at most 1 percentage point higher than in advanced economies, but not significantly so. The paper provides novel estimates of the elasticity of pollution, homicide, and congestion, using a large sample of developing and developed country cities. No evidence is found for productivity gains in light of the high and increasing costs of working in developing country cities. 2021-07-22T13:29:26Z 2021-07-22T13:29:26Z 2021-07 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/749721626709072349/Agglomeration-Economies-in-Developing-Countries-A-Meta-Analysis http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36003 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9730 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa East Asia and Pacific South Asia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
META-ANALYSIS
PRODUCTIVITY
spellingShingle AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
META-ANALYSIS
PRODUCTIVITY
Grover, Arti
Lall, Somik V.
Timmis, Jonathan
Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis
geographic_facet Africa
East Asia and Pacific
South Asia
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9730
description Recent empirical work suggests that there are large agglomeration gains from working and living in developing country cities. These estimates find that doubling city size is associated with an increase in productivity by 19 percent in China, 12 percent in India, and 17 percent in Africa. These agglomeration benefits are considerably higher relative to developed country cities, which are in the range of 4 to 6 percent. However, many developing country cities are costly, crowded, and disconnected, and face slow structural transformation. To understand the true productivity advantages of cities in developing countries, this paper systematically evaluates more than 1,200 elasticity estimates from 70 studies in 33 countries. Using a frontier methodology for conducting meta-analysis, it finds that the elasticity estimates in developing countries are at most 1 percentage point higher than in advanced economies, but not significantly so. The paper provides novel estimates of the elasticity of pollution, homicide, and congestion, using a large sample of developing and developed country cities. No evidence is found for productivity gains in light of the high and increasing costs of working in developing country cities.
format Working Paper
author Grover, Arti
Lall, Somik V.
Timmis, Jonathan
author_facet Grover, Arti
Lall, Somik V.
Timmis, Jonathan
author_sort Grover, Arti
title Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis
title_short Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis
title_full Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis
title_fullStr Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Agglomeration Economies in Developing Countries : A Meta-Analysis
title_sort agglomeration economies in developing countries : a meta-analysis
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/749721626709072349/Agglomeration-Economies-in-Developing-Countries-A-Meta-Analysis
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36003
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