胡佛区域经济学导论英文版AnIntroductiontoRegionalEconomics.doc
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1、An Introduction to Regional EconomicsEdgar M. Hoover and Frank Giarratani1 Introduction1.1 WHAT IS REGIONAL ECONOMICS? Economic systems are dynamic entities, and the nature and consequences of changes that take place in these systems are of considerable importance. Such change affects the well-being
2、 of individuals and ultimately the social and political fabric of community and nation. As social beings, we cannot help but react to the changes we observe. For some people that reaction is quite passive; the economy changes, and they find that their immediate environment is somehow different, forc
3、ing adjustment to the new reality. For others, changes in the economic system represent a challenge; they seek to understand the nature of factors that have led to change and may, in light of that knowledge, adjust their own patterns of behavior or attempt to bring about change in the economic, poli
4、tical, and social systems in which they live and work.In this context, regional economics represents a framework within which the spatial character of economic systems may be understood. We seek to identify the factors governing the distribution of economic activity over space and to recognize that
5、as this distribution changes, there will be important consequences for individuals and for communities.Thus, regional or spatial economics might be summed up in the question What is where, and whyand so what? The first what refers to every type of economic activity: not only production establishment
6、s in the narrow sense of factories, farms, and mines, but also other kinds of businesses, households, and private and public institutions. Where refers to location in relation to other economic activity; it involves questions of proximity, concentration, dispersion, and similarity or disparity of sp
7、atial patterns, and it can be discussed either in broad terms, such as among regions, or microgeographically, in terms of zones, neighborhoods, and sites. The why and the so what refer to interpretations within the somewhat elastic limits of the economists competence and daring.Regional economics is
8、 a relatively young branch of economics. Its late start exemplifies the regrettable tendency of formal professional disciplines to lose contact with one another and to neglect some important problem areas that require a mixture of approaches. Until fairly recently, traditional economists ignored the
9、 where question altogether, finding plenty of problems to occupy them without giving any spatial dimension to their analysis. Traditional geographers, though directly concerned with what is where, lacked any real technique of explanation in terms of human behavior and institutions to supply the why,
10、 and resorted to mere description and mapping. Traditional city planners, similarly limited, remained preoccupied with the physical and aesthetic aspects of idealized urban layouts.This unfortunate situation has been corrected to a remarkable extent within the last few decades. Individuals who call
11、themselves by various professional labelseconomists, geographers, ecologists, city and regional planners, regional scientists, and urbanistshave joined to develop analytical tools and skills, and to apply them to some of the most pressing problems of the time.The unflagging pioneer work and the inte
12、llectual and organizational leadership of Walter Isard since the 1940s played a key role in enlisting support from various disciplines to create this new focus. His domain of regional science is extremely broad. This book will follow a less comprehensive approach, using the special interests and cap
13、abilities of the economist as a point of departure.1.2 THREE FOUNDATION STONESIt will be helpful to realize at the outset that three fundamental considerations underlie the complex patterns of location of economic activity and most of the major problems of regional economics.The first of these found
14、ation stones appears in the simplistic explanations of the location of industries and cities that can still be found in old-style geography books. Wine and movies are made in California because there is plenty of sunshine there; New York and New Orleans are great port cities because each has a natur
15、al water-level route to the interior of the country; easily developable waterpower sites located the early mill towns of New England; and so on. In other words, the unequal distribution of climate, minerals, soil, topography, and most other natural features helps to explain the location of many kind
16、s of economic activity. A bit more generally and in the more precise terminology of economic theory, we can identify the complete or partial immobility of land and other productive factors as one essential part of any explanation of what is where. Such immobility lies at the heart of the comparative
17、 advantage that various regions enjoy for specialization in production and trade.This is, however, by no means an adequate explanation. One of the pioneers of regional economics, August Lsch, set himself the question of what kind of location patterns might logically be expected to appear in an imagi
18、nary world in which all natural resource differentials were assumed away, that is, in a uniformly endowed flat plain.1 In such a situation, one might conceivably expect (1) concentration of all activities at one spot, (2) uniform dispersion of all activities over the entire area (that is, perfect ho
19、mogeneity), or (3) no systematic pattern at all, but a random scatter of activities. What does actually appear as the logical outcome is none of these, but an elaborate and interesting regular pattern somewhat akin to various crystal structures and showing some recognizable similarity to real-world
20、patterns of distribution of cities and towns. We shall have a look at this pattern in Chapter 8. What the Christaller-Lsch theoretical exercises demonstrated was that factors other than natural-resource location play an important part in explaining the spatial pattern of activities.In developing his
21、 abstract model, Lsch assumed just two economic constraints determining location: (1) economies of spatial concentration and (2) transport costs. These are the second and third essential foundation stones.Economists have long been aware of the importance of economies of scale, particularly since the
22、 days of Adam Smith, and have analyzed them largely in terms of imperfect divisibility of production factors and other goods and services. The economies of spatial concentration in their turn can, as we shall see in Chapter 5 and elsewhere, be traced mainly to economies of scale in specific industri
23、es.Finally, goods and services are not freely or instantaneously mobile: Transport and communication cost something in effort and time. These costs limit the extent to which advantages of natural endowment or economies of spatial concentration can be realized.To sum up, an understanding of spatial a
24、nd regional economic problems can be built on three facts of life: (1) natural-resource advantages, (2) economies of concentration, and (3) costs of transport and communication. In more technical language, these foundation stones can be identified as (1) imperfect factor mobility, (2) imperfect divi
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