Show simple item record

dc.creator Gill, Indermit S.
dc.creator Goh, Chor-Ching
dc.date 2012-03-30T07:12:35Z
dc.date 2012-03-30T07:12:35Z
dc.date 2010-08-02
dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-18T19:40:33Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-18T19:40:33Z
dc.identifier World Bank Research Observer
dc.identifier 1564-6971
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4440
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/249925
dc.description This paper summarizes the policy-relevant insights of a generation of research on scale economies. Scale economies in production are of three types: internal economies associated with large plants, localization economies that come from sharing of inputs and infrastructure and from greater competition among firms, and urbanization economies that are generated through diversity and knowledge spillovers. The benefits (and costs) of localization and urbanization are together called “external (dis) economies” because they arise due to factors outside any single household, farm or firm. The empirical literature yields some stylized facts. Internal scale economies are low in light industries and high in heavy industries. External scale economies are amplified by economic density and dissipate with distance from places where economic activity is concentrated. Scale economies are most visibly manifest in towns and cities. To simplify somewhat, towns allow firms and farms to exploit internal scale economies, medium-sized cities help firms in an industry exploit localization economies, and large cities and metropolises provide urbanization economies to those who locate within or nearby. Scale economies have implications for policy makers. The first is that because urban settlements rise and thrive because market agents demand their services, they should be seen as creatures of the market, not creations of the state. The second is that because settlements of different sizes provide differing services, towns, cities, and metropolises are more often complements for one another, not substitutes. Third, as a corollary, policymakers should aim to improve the functioning of urban settlements, and not become preoccupied with their size.
dc.publisher World Bank
dc.rights CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO
dc.rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/
dc.rights World Bank
dc.subject accounting
dc.subject banks
dc.subject city size
dc.subject economics
dc.subject employment
dc.subject externalities
dc.subject fixed costs
dc.subject housing
dc.subject insurance
dc.subject land use
dc.subject large cities
dc.subject mass transit
dc.subject metropolitan areas
dc.subject natural resources
dc.subject productivity
dc.subject savings
dc.subject transport
dc.subject urban growth
dc.subject urbanization
dc.subject wages
dc.title Scale Economies and Cities
dc.type Journal Article
dc.type Journal Article
dc.coverage Latin America & Caribbean
dc.coverage East Asia and Pacific
dc.coverage United States
dc.coverage France


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
wbro_25_2_235.pdf 308.7Kb application/pdf View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse