urban and regional development khin chaw myint associate professor department of applied economics

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Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

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Page 1: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Urban and Regional Development

Khin Chaw Myint

Associate Professor

Department of Applied Economics

Page 2: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Terms and Concepts• Urban Economics - A study of location choices of firms and

households - examines the where of economic activities - a household chooses where to work/ live - a firm chooses where to locate its factory/

office/ retail outlet - Urban economics explores the spatial aspects

of urban problems and public policy

Page 3: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• Urban problems – poverty, urban decay, crime, congestion, pollution are intertwined with location decisions of households and firms:

• Location decisions contribute to urban problems and urban problems influence location decisions

Page 4: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• Three reasons for the urban in urban economics

• 1. most location decisions involve an urban choice ( majority of people living in urban areas)

• 2.urban economics is concerned with location choices within cities

• 3. most of the pressing problems caused by location choices occur in urban areas.

Page 5: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• Urban area

- an area with a relatively high population density.

- Municipality –the area over which a municipal corporation provides local government services such as sewage, crime protection, water supply etc.

- Urbanized area- includes at least one large city and the surrounding area with pop. density exceeding 1000 people per acre. Total pop. must be at least 50,000.

Page 6: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

The role of cities• Why do cities exist?

- for individuals are not self-sufficient.

- cities are where the jobs are/ opportunities

- higher living standards/ more pollution, crime, noise, congestion.

- three main reasons for concentration of jobs in cities

-comparative advantage

-internal scale economies

-agglomerative economies

Page 7: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

-Comparative advantage/ trade between regions market cities

-Internal scale economies/more efficient production for firms industrial cities

-Agglomerative economies in production/marketing firms cluster in cities large industrial/market-based cities

Page 8: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

A model of a rural region

• A region without cities

• Assumptions that prevent the development of cities/When these assumptions are dropped, cities will develop

• Assumptions

-Only two commodities are produced(wheat and wool cloth) and consumed

(1) Inputs, labor and land only.

(2) Equal productivity

Page 9: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Cont’d (3) No scale economies/constant returns to scale

(4) Travel time – travel within the region is by foot only with a speed of four round-trip miles per hour.

-These assumptions-strong enough to prevent trade.

-No advantages from trade or centralized production/every household, self-sufficient

- population distribution will be uniform.

Page 10: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Market Cities

• If the assumption of equal productivity is relaxed, a region or part of a region may be able to produce than the other part of that region

• Thus, there will be a comparative advantage to produce the good that it is more efficient/based on the opportunity cost concept.

• Comparative advantage in one good may lead to a surplus and trading activity will emerge.

Page 11: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• With specialization, both parts of the region can gain from trade.

• If trading takes place, people engaged in and linked to this activity will settle in such places.

• Mostly trading takes place in places where goods can be delivered and transported easily, examples are ports, road junctions/crossroads..

• If more people become settled in this area, the population density will increase/a market city appears

• But transport costs must be reasonable so that trade can be beneficial.

Page 12: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• But three conditions must be satisfied:

• The agriculture sector/rural areas feeds the urban population

• Transport costs must be low for trading activity to exist

Page 13: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Industrial cities

• If the assumption of constant returns to scale is relaxed, industrial or factory cities may emerge

• For this, the factory price(one yard) for the assumed cloth production must be able to underprice home made cloth

• Suppose the time or price for a yard of cloth is 1 hour

• If the factory can produce with less than one hour, people will no longer produce at home

Page 14: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• They will turn to the factory and as factory production survives, people will settle near this factory and pop. density will rise/a factory city or an industrial city appears

• But certain conditions must be satisfied:

• The agri. surplus feeds the factory workers

Page 15: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Large Industrial cities

• Agglomerative economies in production:

• Localization and urbanization economies

• Localization economies

• -- an increase in the total output of a particular industry

• Three principal reasons

• -scale economies in inputs

• -labor market efficiency

• -communication economies

Page 16: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• Scale economies– same input supplier/ reduce costs

• Labor market efficiency– low search costs/low moving costs because of job information received through informal channels/ advertisements

• Communication economies– diffusion of technology, ideas, product designs etc.

Page 17: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• Urbanization economies—same reasons as localization economies but the total output increase is due to the increase in total output of the entire urban area not just of a particular industry

• In urban areas employment condition is stable as businesses can reduce or increase their labor force easily

• Urban areas have people of diverse backgrounds and innovation is easy to take place

Page 18: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Large market based cities

• Agglomerative economies in marketing:

• Shopping externality occurs as sales of one store increases as it becomes located to another or other stores

• Imperfect substitute goods --- comparison shopping e.g. car show rooms..

• Complementary goods--- one stop shopping e.g. pants/coats and shoes/socks

• Save transport costs and more convenient

Page 19: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Location of cities• Commercial firms

• Trading related firms—cities located depending on the trading activity

• River ports, junctions, crossroads etc.

• Different size of cities exist depending on the location of economic activities concerned

Page 20: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

Transfer- oriented firms• Raw materials/ market oriented firms

• Firms locating in the vicinity of input source/market

• Depends on the product, whether weight gaining or volume gaining after production and whether weight losing or volume losing

• If the good produced is weight losing/volume losing the location should be near the input source as to save transport costs

Page 21: Urban and Regional Development Khin Chaw Myint Associate Professor Department of Applied Economics

• If the good produced is weight gaining or volume gaining, the firm should locate near the market

• Transport costs can be less if location is near the market