Bieri, David (2012): Form Follows Function: On the Interaction between Real Estate Finance and Urban Spatial Structure. Published in: CriticalProductive , Vol. 2, No. 1 (February 2013): pp. 7-16.
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Abstract
The fundamental connection between the spatial development of cities and financial markets is a topic that has received little attention from either urbanists or economists. In this short piece, I argue that part of the post-crisis recovery is predicated on a multi-faceted understanding of the subtle causal linkages between financial flows and urban morphologies. Following a historical contextualization of my main argument, I speculate about the key channels through which the dialectical relationship between capital, its regimes of accumulation and its unequal spatial distribution affect the urban fabric. I identify two separate economic processes and historical developments that have co-defined the nexus of real estate finance and urban systems. First, the process of financial globalization and deregulation has been instrumental to the financialization of real estate, and, second, post-Fordist forces of organizational fragmentation have altered the formational principles of core aspects of real estate development processes, including the role of architecture.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
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Original Title: | Form Follows Function: On the Interaction between Real Estate Finance and Urban Spatial Structure |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Real estate finance, financial markets, urban morphologies, financialization |
Subjects: | B - History of Economic Thought, Methodology, and Heterodox Approaches > B0 - General G - Financial Economics > G1 - General Financial Markets G - Financial Economics > G2 - Financial Institutions and Services R - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics > R3 - Real Estate Markets, Spatial Production Analysis, and Firm Location |
Item ID: | 53479 |
Depositing User: | David Stephan Bieri |
Date Deposited: | 09 Feb 2014 19:08 |
Last Modified: | 01 Oct 2019 18:05 |
References: | Baum-Snow, N. (2007) Did highways cause suburbanization?, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 122, 775–805. Bieri, D. S. (2009) Financial stability, the Basel process and the new geography of regulation, Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 2, 303–331. Bieri, D. S. (2010) Lessons from the Financial Crisis: Causes, Consequences, and Our Economic Future , John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, NJ, chap. Regulation and Financial Stability in the Age of Turbulence, pp. 327–336. Bieri, D. S. (2013) Moonlights, Sunspots and Frontier Finance: The Historical Nexus between Money, Credit and Urban Form, Mimeograph, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI. Bostic, R. W., Gabriel, S. and Painter, G. (2009) Housing wealth, Financial wealth, and consumption: New evidence from micro data, Regional Science and Urban Economics, 39, 79–89. Brenner, N. (1998) Between fixity and motion: Accumulation, territorial organization, and the historical geography of spatial scales, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 16, 459–481. Bunge, J., William Wheeler ([1971] 2011) Fitzgerald: Geography of a Revolution, Geographies of Justice and Social Transformation, University of Georgia Press, Athens, GA, 2nd edn. Chaves, E., Knox, P. L. and Bieri, D. S. (2011) International Perspectives on Suburbanization: A Post-Suburban World, Routledge, London, chap. The Restless Landscape of Metroburbia, pp. 35–53. Dixon, A. D. (2012) Function before form: Macro-institutional comparison and the geography of finance, Journal of Economic Geography, 12, 579–600. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/53479 |