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Urban Economics. Economics 153 Pomona College www.economics.pomona.edu/lozano. Individual Activity (5 minutes). Think of one city, any city: What are the costs associated with living in that city? What are the benefits associated with living in that city? Write your answers.
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Urban Economics Economics153 Pomona College www.economics.pomona.edu/lozano
Individual Activity (5 minutes) • Think of one city, any city: • What are the costs associated with living in that city? • What are the benefits associated with living in that city? • Write your answers.
Activity by Pairs (5 minutes): • Discuss the benefits and costs of living in one city with another member of the class. • What are the similarities, and what are the differences.
Punch line: • Cities will exist as long as the benefits associated with living in cities are greater than the costs.
What is Urban Economics? • Definition: Urban Economics is the study of the location choices of firms and households, and the consequences of these choices. • Urban economics examines the question of where of economic activity: 1) Households choose where to work 2) Households choose where to live 3) Firms choose where to locate its factory, office or store.
Why are cities interesting to Economists: • Creation and Innovation: People share ideas and develop new products and production techniques. • Learning in Cities: Contacts in a city facilitate the exchange of knowledge. • Trade and Production in Cities(1): Cities provide economies of scale that make the production of goods and services more efficient. • Trade and Production in Cities(2): Cities are a gathering place for buyers and sellers: they facilitate trade. • Consumption in Cities: Since there are more consumers in cities, there will be demand for many goods and services.
What are Economies of Scale? • When a firm or industry’s average cost decreases when quantity produced increases. • Marginal Cost is lower than average cost. • Cities exist because it is efficient to produce some goods in large scale. • Economies of Scale arise because of: 1. Factor Specialization 2. Indivisible Inputs are shared
Definition of a City: • An area with relatively high population density that contains a set of closely related activities
A 2X2 Model of a City Economy • Outputs: Shirts and Bread • Inputs: Land and Time • Travel technology 8 mph • 3 “City-Less” assumptions: A1) Equal Productivity in Production. A2) Constant Returns to Scale in Production. A3) No Scale Economies in Transportation. • A1-A3 uniform price of land and uniform population density. • If people gather around one area, price of land will go up, no gains from this.
Relax Equal Productivity Assumption (1) • Gains from trade due to differences in productivity.
Relax Equal Productivity Assumption (2) • Exchange at a rate of 2 shirts for one loaf
Relax Equal Productivity Assumption (3) • Both people in the north and in the south are better off. • Still no cities, each southern household trades with a northern household.
Trading CitiesRelax Economies of Scale in Transportation Assumption • Transportation cost per unit decreases. • Efficient to have middlemen to collect, transport and distribute the bread and shirts. • Trading firm will locate in a place convenient to distribution: crossroads, port or river. • Firm employees will want to live close to the firm. • Price of land will go up, land plots will be smaller, and city population density will increase.
Factory CitiesRelax Constant Returns to Scale Assumption (1) • Scale Economies because of factor specialization and indivisible input sharing. • Worker is willing to work in as long as the worker gets paid more in the factory than what she can make by herself. • A consumer will buy from the factory as long as the price paid to the factory plus the cost of commuting is less than what she could do at home. • Workers want to live close to the factory, bid the price of land up, land plots become smaller and population density increases.
Factory CitiesRelax Constant Returns to Scale Assumption (2) • A worker from the south produces 1 loaf or 1 shirt by herself. She produces 4 shirts in the factory and gets paid 1 loaf of bread (shirt cost is ¼ loaf). • The factory cost of the shirt is ¼ loaf. Commuting takes 8 miles an hour. The consumer can produce 1 loaf in an hour (commuting cost per mile is 1/8 loaf). Fig 2-2
The size of the city • Transportation speed: as traveling becomes faster the size of the city increases. • Technology: Lower costs from economies of scale increase the size of the city. • Wages: As commuting times increase, the worker must be compensated for that time, and the factory costs increase.
What is Next: Transportation Costs, learning in cities and Industry Agglomeration • Krugman (JEP, 2002)