© allen c. goodman, 2009 economics 7500 – winter 2009 syllabus and course page urban economics...

24
© Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

Post on 22-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

Economics 7500 – Winter 2009

• Syllabus and Course Page

• Urban Economics

• Allen C. Goodman

 

Page 2: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

Economics 7500 – Winter 2009

• Office Hours: TTh 3:00 – 4:30, or by appointment• Office location: 2145 FAB• Phone: 313/577-3235; e-mail:

[email protected]• Department and Course Web-site: http://

www.econ.wayne.edu/agoodman/

Page 3: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

Economics 7500 – Winter 2009

• This course provides an introduction to the economic intersection of public and urban problems. We will look at issues such as land use, housing, race, poverty, education, crime, and urban economic growth.

• The text materials will be made available at the library and on the web.

 

Page 4: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

Economics 7500 – Winter 2009

• Students will be evaluated on written assignments (30%), class presentations (20%), a mid-term exam (20%), and a final exam (30%).

• The final exam, as noted on the University web site will be:

•  • Thursday, April 30, from 5 P.M. to 7 P.M - 30%.

Page 5: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

The Curve

The following percentage curve will guide the grading policy in the course. 90 – 100 A ; 80 – 84.9 B+; 65 – 69.9 C+ ; Below 55 F 85 – 89.9 A-; 75 – 79.9 B ; 60 – 64.9 C ;

70 – 74.9 B- ; 55 – 59.9 C- ;

Any grade under B- is considered unsatisfactory for graduate work.

Page 6: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

What is Urban Economics?

• What does urban economics do that isn’t done in other types of microeconomics?

We look at space.

We look at land.

We look at the prices of space and land. We call these land rents.

Page 7: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

What is Urban Economics?

• Why do cities exist?

There are some scale economies.

It pays for people to work close together.

Page 8: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

What is Urban Economics?

• Problems that are particularly urban in scope.Poverty

Housing

Education

Crime

Page 9: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

What is an urbanized area?

CentralCity

Density > 1000/sq. mile

Page 10: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

Urbanized Area

What is an urbanized area?

CentralCity

Density > 1000/sq.mile

Urbanized Area

Population > 50,000

Page 11: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

Urbanized Area

What is a metropolitan area?

CentralCity

Pop > 50,000

County

Urbanized Area

or total Population > 100,000

Page 12: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

What we’ll see

Distance from Central Place0

Density

Page 13: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

What we’ll see

Distance from Central Place0

Land Rent

Page 14: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

WHY CITIES?

• CONSIDER A WORLD WITHOUT CITIES. MEASURE DISTANCE IN ONE DIMENSION.

1. TWO (2) HOMOGENEOUS NON-PRODUCED FACTORS OF PRODUCTION - LAND, AND LABOR.

2. ALL INPUTS AND OUTPUTS ARE PERFECTLY DIVISIBLE.

3. WELL-BEHAVED PRODUCTION AND UTILITY FUNCTIONS.

4. CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE (CRTS) IN EACH INDUSTRY.

5. INPUT AND OUTPUT MARKETS ARE PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE.

Page 15: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

ALSO:

6. WORKERS ARE PERFECTLY MOBILE.

7. LAND IS PERFECTLY IMMOBILE, BUT QUALITY IS THE SAME EVERYWHERE.

ALL OF THESE ARE GOOD STANDARD MICRO ASSUMPTIONS, AND GIVE GOOD STANDARD MICRO ANSWERS.

ALL OF THIS IMPLIES THAT:

-- LAND RENTS ARE THE SAME EVERYWHERE

-- LAND USAGE IS THE SAME EVERYWHERE.

Page 16: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

KEY !!!

CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE (CRTS) ALLOWS EACH PRODUCTIVE ACTIVITY TO BE CARRIED OUT AT ARBITRARILY LOW LEVELS WITHOUT INEFFICIENCY (EVERYONE IS HIS/HER OWN FACTORY). EVERYONE PRODUCES EVERYTHING.

IN EQ'M, LAND RENTS ARE THE SAME EVERYWHERE (BECAUSE OF LABOR MOBILITY) –

IF NOT, WORKERS ARE TOO PLENTIFUL SOMEWHERE, TOO SCARCE, ELSEWHERE.

WORKERS WILL ALWAYS MOVE TO EQUALIZE VMPLABOR (AND DE FACTO VMPLAND -- SINCE THINGS ARE DETERMINED BY LABOR/LAND RATIO). THE LABOR/LAND RATIO IS THE SAME EVERYWHERE, SO THE LAND RENT EQUALS VMP OF LAND EVERYWHERE.

Page 17: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

KEY !!!

INFINITE DIVISIBILITY IMPLIES THAT ALL INPUTS AND OUTPUTS NECESSARY TO MEET THE DEMANDS OF CONSUMERS CAN BE LOCATED NEAR WHERE THE CONSUMERS LIVE. INCREASED CONCENTRATION ANYWHERE LEADS TO LOWER WAGES (LOWER VMPLABOR). WORKERS COULD MOVE, AND HAVE MORE MONEY TO SPEND. IN EQ'M, NO $$$ NEED BE SPENT ON TRANSPORTATION (EVERYONE PRODUCES EVERYTHING FOR HIM/HERSELF).

CRTS AND UNIFORM DISTRIBUTION OF LAND (FACTORS) ARE CRUCIAL. WITH CRTS, THE DESIRE TO AVOID TRANSPORTATION COSTS LEADS TO A UNIFORM DENSITY OF POPULATION AND ECONOMIC ACTIVITY (SINCE ALL CAN BE PRODUCED AT A SMALL SCALE).

Page 18: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

WHY, THEN, DO WE SEE CITIES??

WE MUST ACCOUNT FOR THE AGGLOMERATION THAT WE KNOW CHARACTERIZES URBAN ACTIVITIES. WHY DO WE SEE CAPITAL/LAND RATIOS THAT ARE HUNDREDS OF TIMES AS LARGE IN ONE PLACE THAN IN ANOTHER?

1. FACTOR DIFFERENCES AMONG AREAS.IN THE TRADE LITERATURE, HECKSCHER-OHLIN CONDITIONS IMPLY THAT VARYING FACTOR PROPORTIONS DRIVE TRADE IN OTHERWISE IDENTICALLY TECHNOLOGICALLY EQUIPPED AREAS. EVEN WITH THE SAME PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS, FACTOR DIFFERENCES TRADE. IN 2 X 2 MODEL, LAND INTENSIVE COUNTRY TRADES LAND-INTENSIVE GOOD WITH COUNTRY THAT IS MORE LABOR INTENSIVE, FOR THE LABOR-INTENSIVE GOOD.

Page 19: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

WHY, THEN, DO WE SEE CITIES??

WHY? LAND NEAR SHIPMENT POINTS IS DESIRABLE. IF TRADE IS DESIRABLE, SO IS MINIMIZATION OF TRANSPORT COSTS. THIS MAKES LAND NEAR THE SHIPMENT POINTS DESIRABLE. EQ'M OCCURS WHEN LAND VALUES ON THE LESS DESIRABLE LAND EQUALIZE THE TRANSPORTATION COST DIFFERENTIALS.

THE SAME THING MAY OCCUR WITHIN AN AREA (COUNTRY) AS WELL, FOR INTRA-REGIONAL TRADE.

Page 20: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

SCALE ECONOMIESASSUME SCALE ECONOMIES REQUIRE CONTIGUOUS PRODUCTION IN EQ'M, LARGE AMOUNTS ARE PRODUCED IN SOME PLACES; NONE ELSEWHERE. PRODUCERS OF INPUTS WILL WANT TO BE NEAR THE FIRM TO MINIMIZE TRANSPORTATION COSTS. SO WILL THE WORKER, SO WILL ALL OF THE OTHER ECONOMIC UNITS.

THIS LEADS TO AGGLOMERATION CENTERED ON PRODUCTION OF THE COMMODITY WITH SCALE ECONOMIES. THUS THE LAND VALUES, DENSITIES, OUTPUT-LAND RATIOS ALL DECREASE WITH DISTANCE FROM THE CENTER OF THE URBAN AREA.

THE TWO THEORIES LEAD TO 2 DIFFERENT TYPES OF CITIES1. CITIES GENERATED BY REGIONAL COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE TRADE WITH EACH OTHER BECAUSE REGIONS ARE DIFFERENT.2. CITIES GENERATED BY SCALE ECONOMIES TRADE WITH HINTERLAND, NOT WITH EACH OTHER

Page 21: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

LOESCH/Industry

LOESCH EXTENDS SCALE ARGUMENTS TO INDUSTRIES WITH DIFFERENT SCALES. THAT IS, LARGE CITIES EXPORT GOODS TO SMALLER CITIES; SMALLER CITIES DO NOT EXPORT UP.

LARGE CITY ACTIVITIES -> THOSE REQUIRING LARGE SCALES, INCLUDING CULTURAL, SPORTS, SOME PUBLIC SERVICES.

SMALL CITY ACTIVITIES - > LEGAL, MEDICAL, BANKING.

SO, CITIES FUNCTION TO FACILITATE PRODUCTION AND EXCHANGE BY THE NEARBY LOCATION OF ACTIVITIES !!!

Page 22: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

LOESCH/Industry

THIS HAS SOME PARTICULAR INTEREST IN OTHER FIELDS AS WELL. IN THE HEALTH ECONOMICS FIELD, THERE IS A LOT OF CONCERN ABOUT THE "SHORTAGE" OF PHYSICIANS IN SMALL TOWNS, WHILE THERE MAY BE A "SURPLUS" IN THE BIG CITIES. SUPPOSE THAT WE THINK OF VARIOUS LEVELS OF PRACTICE:MEDICAL CENTER; HOSPITAL; CLINIC; PRIVATE OFFICE.

SOME CITIES MAY ONLY BE ABLE TO SUPPORT THE SMALLEST, E.G. PRIVATE OFFICE. LARGER CITIES MAY BE ABLE TO SUPPORT PRIVATE OFFICE AND CLINIC ETC. IF THERE ARE SCALE ECONOMIES THEN THE "MISALLOCATION" OF PHYSICIANS MAY NOT BE A MISALLOCATION AT ALL.

Page 23: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

ONE FURTHER CONDITION

THERE MUST BE A SURPLUS IN THE AGRICULTURAL SECTOR. OTHERWISE, THOSE IN THE CITIES WOULD HAVE NOTHING TO EAT. THE STORY GOES SOMETHING LIKE THIS.A. FARMER TAKES GRAIN TO NEAREST TOWN. TRADES IT FOR THE GOODS THAT HE NEEDS, SOME OF WHICH IS PRODUCED THERE, MOST OF WHICH IS TRADED FOR FROM ABOVE. B. MERCHANT TRADES THE GRAIN SURPLUS THAT HE/SHE HAS AFTER TAKING CARE OF NEEDS, "UP THE CHAIN" FOR MORE SOPHISTICATED STUFF. C. PEOPLE UP THE CHAIN ARE WILLING TO BUY GRAIN, TO STAY ALIVE. WITHOUT GRAIN SURPLUS, NO ONE CAN AFFORD TO MOVE OFF OF THE FARM

Page 24: © Allen C. Goodman, 2009 Economics 7500 – Winter 2009 Syllabus and Course Page Urban Economics Allen C. Goodman

© Allen C. Goodman, 2009

TWO REASONS, THEN FOR CITIES

1. SCALE ECONOMIES

2. INTERREGIONAL TRADE

MAJOR ADVANTAGES TO PROXIMITY

1. LOW TRANSPORTATION AND EXCHANGE COSTS

2. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF SCALE ECONOMIES

MAJOR DISADVANTAGES

1. ULTIMATELY DIMINISHING RETURNS TO RATIOS OF NON-LAND TO LAND INPUTS.

2. EXTERNALITIES !!! NOISE SMOKE, DISEASE, ETC.