Goerlich, Francisco José and Mas, Matilde (2009): Drivers of Agglomeration: geography VS. History. Forthcoming in: The Open Urban Studies Journal
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_15802.pdf Download (352kB) | Preview |
Abstract
This paper focuses on the influence of two classical drivers of population agglomeration: geography and history. Geography is identified by two co-ordinates: coastal position and altitude. The prominence of history is also captured by two characteristics: the initial size of the municipalities, and their status as the administrative centre of the area. In first instance we examine localization patterns, at a small geographical scale, according to these characteristics and present empirical evidence of the progressive population concentration along the coast, on the plains and in the regional (provincial) capitals; a process that has not finished in the present days. Next, we show that both drivers of population agglomeration, geography and history, are relevant for Spain and that they show an increasing explanatory power in accounting for population concentration. From a quantitative point of view the capital status factor shows the most prominent role. An exercise of conditional convergence shows that, even in the absence of these factors, we would have seen a significant amount of population concentration but at a smaller rate. Our reference is the census population data for Spanish municipalities for the period 1900-2001. Given the important changes in municipality structure, the eleven censuses have been homogenised according to the municipal structure of the 2001 Census.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Drivers of Agglomeration: geography VS. History |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Population, Municipalities, Census, Agglomeration |
Subjects: | J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J1 - Demographic Economics > J10 - General J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J1 - Demographic Economics > J11 - Demographic Trends, Macroeconomic Effects, and Forecasts |
Item ID: | 15802 |
Depositing User: | Matilde Mas |
Date Deposited: | 19 Jun 2009 05:49 |
Last Modified: | 01 Oct 2019 02:28 |
References: | Vinuesa Angulo J. El crecimiento de la población y los desequilibrios en la distribución espacial. In: Puyol R. (Ed.): Dinámica de la población en España: cambios demográficos en el último cuarto del siglo XX. Madrid: Ed. Síntesis 1997; 265-311. Zoido F, Arroyo A. La población de España. In Arroyo A. (Coord.): Tendencias demográficas durante el siglo XX en España. Available from: http://www.ine.es/prodyser/pubweb/tend_demo_s20/tend_demo_s20.htm. Madrid: Instituto Nacional de Estadística 2004. De Cos O, Reques P. Los cambios en los patrones territoriales de la población española (1900-2001). Papeles de Economía Española 2005; 104: 167-192. Goerlich FJ, Mas M, Azagra J, Chorén P. La Localización de la Población sobre el Territorio. Un Siglo de Cambios. Un Estudio Basado en Series Homogéneas 1900-2001. Bilbao: Fundación BBVA 2006. Nadal J. (Director). Atlas de la Industrialización de España, 1975-2000. Bilbao: Fundación BBVA-Editorial Crítica 2003. Davis DR, Weinstein DE. Bones, bombs, and break points: The geography of economic activity, The American Economic Review 2002; 92(5) (December): 1269-1289. De Vries J. European Urbanization 1500 – 1800. London: Methuen and Co. Ltd 1984. Ayuda MA, Collantes F, Pinilla V. From locational fundamentals to increasing returns: The spatial concentration of population in Spain, 1787 - 2000. Mimeo. Zaragoza (Spain): Universidad de Zaragoza 2004. Ayuda MA, Collantes F, Pinilla V. Long-run regional population divergence and modern economic growth in Europe: A case study of Spain. Working Paper nr. 310-2007, Fundación de las Cajas de Ahorro (FUNCAS), Madrid 2007. Martí-Henneberg J. Empirical evidence of regional population concentration in Europe, 1870-2000. Population, Space and Place 2005; 11: 269-281. Goerlich FJ, Mas M. Algunas pautas de localización de la población a lo largo del siglo XX. Investigaciones Regionales 2008; 12 (Primavera/Spring): 5-33. Ades A, Glaeser E. Trade and circuses: Explaining Urban Giants. Quarterly Journal of Economics 1995; 110: 195-228. Lanaspa L, Pueyo F, Sanz F. The Evolution of Spanish Urban Structure during the Twentieth Century. Urban Studies 2003; 40(3): 567-580. Le Gallo J, Chasco-Yrigoren C. Spatial Analysis of Urban Growth in Spain, 1900-2001. Empirical Economics 2008; 34(1) (February): 59-80. Wheaton W, Shishido H. Urban concentration, agglomeration economies and the level of economic development. Economic Development and Cultural Change 1981; 30: 17-30. Suarez-Villa L. Metropolitan evolution, sectoral economic change, and the city size distribution. Urban Studies 1988; 25: 1-20. Van der Woude A, De Vries J, Hayami A. Introduction: The hierarchies, provisioning, and demographic patterns of cities. In: Van der Woude A, De Vries J, Hayami A. (Eds.): Urbanization in History. A Process of Dynamic Interaction. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1990; 1-19. Glaeser E, Scheinkman J, Shleifer A. Economic growth in a cross-section of cities. Journal of Monetary Economics 1995; 36: 117-143. Eaton J, Eckstein Z. City and growth: Theory and evidence from France and Japan. Regional Science and Urban Economics 1997; 27: 443-474. Gabaix X. Zipf’s law and the growth of cities. American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings 1999; 89: 129-132. Overman HG, Ioannides YM. Cross-sectional evolution of the U.S. city size distribution. Journal of Urban Economics 2001; 49: 543-566. Black D, Henderson V. Urban evolution in the USA. Journal of Economic Geography 2003; 3 (October): 343-372. Ioannides YM, Overman HG. Zipf´s law for cities: an empirical examination. Regional Science and Urban Economics 2003; 33: 127-137. Ioannides YM, Overman HG. Spatial evolution of the US urban system. Journal of Economic Geography 2004; 4: 131-156. Eeckhout J. Gibrat’s law for (all) cities. The American Economic Review 2004; 94(5) (December): 1429-1451. García Fernández P. Población de los actuales términos municipales 1900-1981. Poblaciones de hecho según los censos, Madrid: Instituto Nacional de Estadística 1985. García España E. Censos de población españoles. Estadística Española 1991; 33(128) (September-December). Available from http://www.ine.es. Ministerio de Fomento. Atlas estadístico de las áreas urbanas en España. Madrid: Ministerio de Fomento (Spanish Ministry of Public Works) 2000. Theil H. Economics and Information Theory. Amsterdam: North-Holland 1967. Rappaport J, Sachs JD. The United States as a Coastal Nation. Journal of Economic Growth 2003; 8: 5-46. Collantes Gutiérrez F. Declive demográfico y cambio económico en las áreas de montaña españolas, 1860-2000. Revista de Historia Económica – Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History 2005; 23(3): 515-540. Collantes Gutiérrez F. La desagrarización de la sociedad rural española, 1950-1991. Historia Agraria. Revista de Agricultura e Historial Rural 2007; 42 (Agosto): 251-276. Krugman P. Geography and Trade, Leuven (Belgium): Leuven University Press and Cambridge (Massachusetts): The MIT Press 1991. Barro RJ, Sala-i-Martín X. Convergence. Journal of Political Economy 1992; 100(2): 223-251. Barro RJ, Sala-i-Martín X. Economic Growth. New York: McGraw Hill 1995. White HA. A heteroskedasticity-consistent covariance matrix and a direct test for heteroskedasticity, Econometrica 1980; 48(4) (May): 721-746. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/15802 |