Urban concentration is typically deemed to lead to greater national economic growth. This column challenges this view, using an original dataset covering 68 countries over the past three decades. Urban concentration levels have decreased or remained stable on average, though these averages hide widely diverging trends across countries. Although concentration has been beneficial for high-income countries, this hasn’t been the case for for developing countries.
Related
-
Elena Nikolova
Most Read
-
Lalive, Magesan, Staubli
-
Chronopoulos, Kampanelis, Oto-Peralías, Wilson
-
Cagé, Dagorret, Grosjean, Jha
-
Escobari, Levy Yeyati
-
Caffarra, Scott Morton
-
Eichengreen, O'Rourke
-
Burgess, Sievertsen
-
Mitze, Kosfeld, Rode, Wälde
-
Heldring, Robinson
-
Eichengreen
Blogs&Reviews
-
Sapir
-
Bouchaud, Farmer
-
Baldwin
-
Kende
-
Angeloni
Vox eBooks

Bartsch, Bénassy-Quéré, Corsetti, Debrun, 15 December 2020
Don't Miss
Bartsch, Bénassy-Quéré, Corsetti, Debrun
Scheuer
Bozio, Garbinti, Goupille-Lebret, Guillot, Piketty
Events
-
28 - 29 January 2021 / Online - Zoom / Timberlake Consultants
-
29 - 29 January 2021 / Online /
-
5 - 5 February 2021 / Online /
-
12 - 12 February 2021 / Online / Erasmus University Rotterdam, Tilburg University and the University of Amsterdam
-
12 - 12 February 2021 / Online /
CEPR Policy Research
-
Gobillon, Solignac
-
Giglio, Maggiori, Stroebel, Weber
-
Summers, Fatás
-
Favero, Galasso
-
Butt, Churm, McMahon, Morotz, Schanz
-
Eichengreen, Avgouleas, Poiares Maduro, Panizza, Portes, Weder di Mauro, Wyplosz, Zettelmeyer
-
Baldwin, Beck, Bénassy-Quéré, Blanchard, Corsetti, De Grauwe, den Haan, Giavazzi, Gros, Kalemli-Ozcan, Micossi, Papaioannou, Pesenti, Pissarides , Tabellini, Weder di Mauro
-
Baldwin, Nakatomi
-
Thimann
-
Goodhart, Perotti