区域经济学英文课件1

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区域经济学英文名词

区域经济学英文名词

区域经济学英文名词English:Regional economics, also known as geographical economics, is a branch of economics that studies the economic behavior of regions. It focuses on understanding the factors that contribute to the economic development and growth of specific geographical areas, as well as the interactions between different regions. This field examines various aspects such as regional production, trade, investment, and consumption, as well as the impact of government policies, infrastructure, and natural resources on regional economies. Regional economics also explores issues related to spatial inequality, regional disparities, and the role of agglomeration in shaping regional economic activities. With the rise of globalization and the increasing importance of regional economic integration, the study of regional economics has become more relevant in understanding the dynamics of local and global economies.中文翻译:区域经济学,又称地理经济学,是经济学的一个分支,研究地区经济行为。

《区域经济学》课件

《区域经济学》课件
区域经济政策的评估
通过经济增长、就业、收入分配等方面的指标,对区域经济政策的实 施效果进行评估和调整。
区域经济政策的调整
根据评估结果和经济发展形势,对区域经济政策进行调整和完善,以 更好地促进区域经济发展。
区域协调发展的理论与实践
区域协调发展的概念
指不同地区之间在经济、社会 、文化等方面相互促进、共同 发展,实现地区间的均衡发展 。
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区域经济结构是指一个区域内各种经济活动的相 互关系和内在联系,包括产业结构、就业结构、 城乡结构、地区结构等。
2
区域经济结构的形成受到自然资源、地理位置、 经济发展阶段和社会经济制度等多种因素的影响 。
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区域经济结构的合理与否直接影响到区域经济的 发展水平和可持续性。
产业布局的基本理论
产业布局是指产业在地域上的分布和组合,是经济地理学的重要研究内容 。
人口因素
区域内的人口数量、素质和结构等会 影响区域经济的发展,如劳动力供给 和市场需求。
技术进步
技术进步是推动区域经济发展的重要 因素,可以提高生产效率、降低成本 、促进产业升级和创新。
区域经济发展模式
出口导向型模式
以出口导向型产业为主要发展方向,通 过扩大出口来带动区域经济的发展。
高新技术产业模式
区域经济学的研究对象
总结词
区域经济学的研究对象
详细描述
区域经济学的研究对象主要包括特定地区的经济发展、产业布局、资源配置、城市化、区域政策等, 以及地区间的经济关系和互动。
区域经济学的重要性
总结词
区域经济学的重要性
详细描述
区域经济学对于理解地区经济发展、制定有效的区域政策和促进地区间经济协调发展具 有重要的意义。它可以帮助政府和企业做出更加科学合理的经济决策,推动地区经济的

区域经济学regional economic development第一章

区域经济学regional economic development第一章
An alternative view is that government intervention prevents the market adjustment mechanism from working and thus interferes with solving the problem rather than providing a solution.
Income disparities are what we will be mainly concerned with but usually, when a region lags behind in income, it will also lag in many, perhaps most, other areas as well.
In the most general sense, regional development is about facilitating/creating development in different parts of a country. But our concern will specifically focus on poor regions and how they can be made to “catch-up” to the national average in development. This means that we want to look at why differences exist in the first place and what can be done about it in the second place.
Regional development refers to the economic development of a region. Our emphasis will be focused on less developed regions, or what sometimes are simply referred to as poor regions. And how they can be developed so that they catch up with the more developed or rich regions of a country.

城市经济学英文课件 (1)

城市经济学英文课件 (1)

1-17
Axiom 3: Externalities Cause Inefficiency
• Externality: cost or benefit of a transaction experienced by someone else • External cost: burning gasoline affects breathers • External benefit: painting a peeling house increases property values
• Extent of scale economies varies across activities
1-19
Axiom 5: Competition Generates Zero Economic Profit
• Entry into market continues until economic profit is zero • Economic cost includes explicit cost and opportunity cost of time and funds • Firms earn just enough to stay in business, but not enough to attract entrants
1-10
Figure 1.1: Percent of U.S. Population in Urban Areas, 1800-2010
1-11
1-12
1-13
1-14
1-15
Axiom 1: Prices Adjust to Achieve Locational Equilibrium
1-4
Part 3: Urban transportation

区域经济学(第二版)课件:国际区域经济

区域经济学(第二版)课件:国际区域经济

2024年11月19日星期
国际区域经济
3

第一节 国际区域经济概述
一、区域经济一体化的概念 1.定义:指地理上邻近的国家或地区,为了维护共同的经济利益和
加强经济联系与合作,相互间通过契约和协定,在区域 内逐步消除成员国间的贸易与非贸易壁垒,进而协调成 员国间的社会经济政策,形成一个跨越国界的商品、资
国际区域经济
19

三、APEC发展的特点 (1)在国际贸易保护主义不断加强的形势下成立; (2)发展中制定了推动贸易和投资自由化的明确目的;
(3)采取了特殊的合作方式,即“APEC模式”。 四、APEC存在的问题及其前景 问题:部门提前自由化失败、经济技术合作进展缓慢、对亚
洲金融危机反应迟缓、其政治化倾向越来越明显等。 原因: 1.原则的约束性与非约束性问题上的矛盾 2.自由化速度问题上的矛盾 3. 经济技术合作定位问题上的分歧 4. APEC性质认识上的争论
2024年11月19日星期
国际区域经济
20

3.
APEC的作用?
2024年11月19日星期 二
促进了亚太地区成员 间的相互沟通,对亚 太地区的稳定与发展 起到了一定的作用。
国际区域经济
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关键术语 国际区域经济 区域经济一体化 欧洲联盟 北美自由贸易区
亚太经济合作组织
思考题 1.国际区域经济一体化组织有哪几种类型?其特点是什么? 2.欧盟要走向政治联盟需要哪些条件? 3.北美自由贸易区的宗旨是什么?说明商品贸易规则有哪些条 款? 4.阐述APEC制度创新的动力。
2024年11月19日星期
国际区域经济
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第四节 亚太经济合作组织的区域经济特点

区域经济学英语ppt课件

区域经济学英语ppt课件

Urban and regional planning: Regional economics plays an important role in urban and regional planning. Through in-depth analysis of the economic development status, resource conditions, industrial structure, etc. of a city or region, provide planning plans and suggestions for the government and enterprises.
The influencing factors of regional economic development
03
Natural resources
The availability of natural resources, such as minerals, energy, and agricultural land, can significantly impact a region's economic development Natural resources can provide the raw materials for local industries, which can drive economic growth and job creation
Optimizing resource allocation
Regional economics focuses on the spatial allocation and utilization efficiency of resources, studying how to achieve rational flow and effective allocation of resources, improve economic efficiency and overall competitiveness within the region.

第十一章 区域经济增长中的要素流动 《区域经济学》PPT课件

第十一章   区域经济增长中的要素流动  《区域经济学》PPT课件

(二)产业转移的经济动因
• 2.产业转移与产品生命周期
产品生命周期与城市产业转移分析
• 该图横轴表示时间t,纵轴表示产业投资量,原点O的上方表示净 输出,原点O的下方表示净输入。假设中心城市是新产品的发明 者,即从t0—t1为新产品阶段,中心城市从事该产品的设计创新与 投产,并在城市内部市场销售。从t1 开始产品逐渐成熟,中心城 市将经济活动的一部分转移到某些消费偏好相似的次中心城市, 这些城市的市场潜在强劲需求刺激本地的厂商模仿或引进生产 技术进行生产,并在本地市场上与中心城市的厂商进行竞争,然 后也开始向外出口产品,到t3次中心城市已成为净输出地。以此 类推。
三、创新的空间扩散机理
• (三)基于创新需求的扩散模型 •
基于创新需求的扩散模型分析
• 创新能否成功地在某个区域扩散,首先取决于诸多经济因素,如 购买力水平与收入分布、经济结构、城市化水平、产业集中程 度与竞争程度、与创新源的距离、交通通讯设施水平等。
• 其次,创新在区域之间的扩散受限于技术因素,如技术基ቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ设施、 技术人员、科研人员和相关服务,它们主要提供技术咨询、培训 和其他服务。
• 图中纵轴表示A城市公共产品供给能力,横轴表示B城市的公共产 品供给能力,曲线YbYe表示这两城市公共产品供给的社会生产可 能性边界,Ub表示A城市偏好型资本持有人的效用曲线,Ue表示偏 好于B城市的资本持有人的效用曲线,YbYe上的A、B两点则分别表 示这两个资本持有人的效用最大化的服务/税收组合。
(二)产业转移的经济动因
3.价值构成差异与产业转移 价值构成的相异性,表现在区域中下一等级上的城市趋同产业产 品价值中的劳动力价值小于上一等级上的城市趋同产业产品价 值中的劳动力价值,而前者产品价值中的剩余价值却大于后者产 品的剩余价值。 发达地区有较高的绝对成本将趋同产业转移给别的地区。自己 则将资本、劳动力及其他资源投入新兴产业。

第1章 导论4 区域经济学教学课件_124

第1章 导论4  区域经济学教学课件_124
1.经济区域
2.区域经济
二、区域经济学存在和发展的 客观依据
▪ 自然禀赋的差异性 ➢ 自然条件的不同:区域差异可以理解为“级差收益” ➢ 资源的稀缺性:要求资源的优化配置 ➢ 生产要素的不均衡分布和不完全流动性
▪ 经济活动的极化性 ➢ 规模经济 ➢ 聚集经济
▪ 空间距离的不可灭性 ➢ 运输成本、储藏成本和空间成本
的分析方法进行区域经济的研究
四、中国区域经济学形成与发展
1978年以前——区域经济学萌芽时期
生产力布局研究的主要内容
生产力布局的原则
区域经济的主要特点 积极效果 产生的问题 延缓了发展速度、造成巨大的经
济损失、丧失区域分工效益、区域经济研究僵 化
中西部的原材料、农产品等
国家调拨 低价格
▪ 创新能力的部分排他性和竞争性
550公里冻土段铁路
大芬村---油画村
三、研究对象
▪ 几种不同的观点
▪ 定义
区域经济学是研究区域经济发 展规律和区际经济关系以及与 此有关的区域决策的科学。
四、主要研究内容
▪ 经济活动的区位理论
▪ 区域经济增长与发展理论(区域经济增长理论、
区域发展阶段、产业结构与组织、区域空间Hale Waihona Puke 构、区域基▪ 目前存在的问题
第三节 现代区域经济学主要流派
一、新经济地理学派
1.建立区域经济分析的模型框架 2.新经济地理学派的五大传统理论
二、新制度学派
1.通过政府的干预导致生产的空间转移 2.产业和部门规划是区域政策的第二个部分 3.缩小区域差距是区域政策的第三个部分
三、区域管理学派
1.区域经济发展管理 2.区域人口管理 3.区域环境管理
➢均质区域(homogeneous region):根 据区域内某些重要因素特征的一致性或相 似性进行划分的区域 。

《区域经济学》课件

《区域经济学》课件

区域经济发展中的问题与对策
01
区域经济发展中存在的问题包括产业结构不合理、资源环境压力大、 人才短缺等。
02
对策包括优化产业结构、加强科技创新、推进绿色发展、加强人才培 养等。
03
优化产业结构是指通过调整产业结构,提高产业附加值和技术含量, 推动产业升级和转型。
04
加强科技创新是指通过加强研发和推广新技术,提高生产效率和产品 质量,增强企业核心竞争力。
04
区域经济政策与实践
区域经济政策的基本概念
01
区域经济政策定义
区域经济政策是政府为了促进区域经 济发展、改善区域经济结构、缩小区 域发展差距而制定的各项经济政策。
02
区域经济政策的理论 基础
区域经济政策的理论基础包括区域经 济发展理论、区域差异理论、区域产 业结构理论等,这些理论为制定区域 经济政策提供了指导。
03
区域产业结构与优化
区域产业结构的基本概念
区域产业结构
指一个区域内各种产业部门的构 成以及它们之间的相互关系和比 例。
区域产业结构分类
根据不同的分类标准,可以将区 域产业结构分为不同的类型,如 按三次产业分类、按资源密集度 分类等。
区域产业结构的特

区域产业结构具有地域性、历史 性和动态性的特点,不同地区的 产业结构存在差异,且随着时间 的推移,区域产业结构也会发生 变化。
03
区域经济政策的工具
区域经济政策的工具包括财政政策、 货币政策、产业政策、土地政策等, 这些政策工具可以单独或组合使用, 以实现区域经济发展的目标。
区域经济政策的实践案例
01
欧盟的区域经济政策
欧盟为了促进成员国之间的均衡发展,实施了一系列区域经济政策,如

《经济学(英文版)》教学课件—01 Introduction

《经济学(英文版)》教学课件—01 Introduction
1.1 Managerial Decision Making Describe the maj face
1.2 Economic Models Explain how economic models are useful in managerial decision making
Profit = Revenue − Costs
• The job of the chief executive officer (CEO) is to focus on the bottom line: maximizing profit. – The CEO is also concerned with how a firm is positioned in a market relative to its rivals. ▪ However, it is critical the CEO focuses on maximizing the firm’s profit rather than beating a rival.
1.1 Managerial Decision Making (3 of 5)
Trade-Offs • In an environment of scarcity, managers must focus on the trade-offs that directly or
indirectly affect profits. – Evaluating trade-offs often involves marginal reasoning: considering the effect of a small change.
• The firm’s top manager must coordinate and direct all these activities. – Could you think on this manager’s constraints?

胡佛《区域经济学导论》英文版(doc 328)

胡佛《区域经济学导论》英文版(doc 328)

胡佛《区域经济学导论》英文版(doc 328)部门: xxx时间: xxx整理范文,仅供参考,可下载自行编辑An Introduction toRegional 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 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, forcing 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, political, 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 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 why—and so what?" The first what refers to every type of economic activity: not only production establishments 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 spatial 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 economist's competence and daring.Regional economics is 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 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, 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 themselves by various professional labels—economists, geographers, ecologists, city and regional planners, regional scientists, and urbanists—have joinedto 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 intellectual 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 capabilities 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 "foundation 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 natural 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 kinds 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 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 Lösch, set himself the question of what kind of location patterns might logically be expected to appear in an imaginary world in which all natural resource differentials were assumed away, that is, in a uniformly endowed flat plain.1In 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 homogeneity), 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 patterns of distribution of cities and towns. We shall have a look at this pattern in Chapter 8. What the Christaller-Lösch 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 abstract model, Lösch 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 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 industries.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 advantagesof natural endowment or economies of spatial concentration can be realized.To sum up, an understanding of spatial and 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 divisibility, and (3) imperfect mobility of goods and services.1.3 REGIONAL ECONOMIC PROBLEMS AND THE PLAN OF THIS BOOKWhat, then, are the actual problems in which an understanding of spatial economics can be helpful? They arise, as we shall see, on several different levels. Some are primarily microeconomic, involving the spatial preferences, decisions, and experiences of such units as households or business firms. Others involve the behavior of large groups of people, whole industries, or such areas as cities or regions. To give some idea of the range of questions involved and also the approach that this book takes in developing a conceptual framework to handle them, we shall follow here a sequence corresponding to the successive later chapters.The business firm is, of course, most directly interested in what regional economics may have to say about choosing a profitable location in relation to given markets, sources of materials, labor, services, and other relevant location factors. A nonbusiness unit such as a household, institution, or public facility faces an analogous problem of location choice, though the specific location factors to be considered may be rather different and less subject to evaluation in terms of price and profit. Our survey of regional economics begins in Chapter 2 by taking a microeconomic viewpoint. That is, all locations, conditions, and activities other than the individual unit in question will be taken as given: The individual unit's problem is to decide what location it prefers.The importance of transport and communication services in determining locations (one of the three foundation stones) will become evident in Chapter 2. The relation of distance to the cost of the spatial movement of goods and services, however, is not simple. It depends on such factors as route layouts, scale economies in terminal and carriage operations, the length of the journey, the characteristics of the goods and services transferred, and the technical capabilities of the available transport and communication media. Chapter 3identifies and explains such relations and will explore their effects on the advantages of different locations.In Chapter 4, an analysis of pricing decisions and demand in a spatial context is developed. This analysis extends some principles of economics concerning the theory of pricing and output decisions to the spatial dimension. As a result, we shall be able to appreciate more fully the relationship between pricing policies and the market area of a seller. We shall find also that space provides yet another dimension for competition among sellers. Further, this analysis will serve as a basis for understanding the location patterns of whole industries. If an individual firm or other unit has any but the most myopic outlook, it will want to know something about shifts in such patterns. For example, a firm producing oil-drilling or refinery equipment should be interested in the locational shifts in the oil industry and a business firm enjoying favorable access to a market should want to know whether it is likely that more competition will be coming its way.While some of the issues developed in Chapter 4 concern factors that contribute to the dispersion of sellers within an industry, Chapter 5 recognizes the powerful forces that may draw sellers together in space. From an analysis of various types of economies of spatial concentration and a description of empirical evidence bearing on their significance, we shall find that the nature of this foundation stone of location decisions can have important consequences for local areas orregions.Chapter 6 introduces explicit recognition of the fact that activities require space. Space (or distance, which is simply space in one dimension) plays an interestingly dual role in the location of activities. On the one hand, distance represents cost and inconvenience when there is a need for access (for instance, in commuting to work or delivering a product to the market), and transport and communication represent more or less costly ways of surmounting the handicaps to human interaction imposed by distance. But at the same time, every human activity requires space for itself. In intensively developed areas, sheer elbowroom as well as the amenities of privacy are scarce and valuable. In this context, space and distance appear as assets rather than as liabilities.Chapter 6 treats competition for space as a factor helping to determine location patterns and individual choices. The focus here is still more "macro" than the discussion of location patterns developed in preceding chapters, in that it is concerned with the spatial ordering of different types of land use around some special point—for example, zones of different kinds of agriculture around a market center. In Chapter 6, the location patterns of many industries or other activities are considered as constituents of the land-use pattern of an area, like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Many of the real problems with which regional economies deal are in fact posed in terms of land use (How is this site or area best used?) rather than in terms of location per se (Where is this firm, household, or industry best situated?). The insights developed in this chapter are relevant, then, not only for the individual locators but also for those owning land, operating transit or other utility services, or otherwise having a stake in what happens to a given piece of territory.The land-use analysis of Chapter 6 serves also as a basis for understanding the spatial organization of economic activity within urban areas. For this reason, Chapter 7employs the principles of resource allocation that govern land use and exposes the fundamental spatial structure of urban areas. Consideration is given also to the reasons for and implications of changes in urban spatial structure. This analysis provides a framework for understanding a diverse array of problems faced by city planners and community developers and redevelopers.In Chapter 8, the focus is broadened once more in order to understand patterns of urbanization within a region: the spacing, sizes, and functions of cities, and particularly the relationship between size and function. Real-world questions involving this so-called central-place analysis include, for example, trends in city-size distributions. Is the crossroads hamlet or the small town losing its functions and becoming obsolete, or is its place in the spatial order becoming more important? What size city or town is the best location for some specific kind of business or public facility? What services and facilities are available only in middle-sized and larger cities, or only in the largest metropolitan centers? In the planned developed or underdeveloped region, what size distribution and location pattern of cities would be most appropriate? Any principles or insights that can help answer such questions or expose the nature of their complexity are obviously useful to a wide range of individuals.Chapter 9deals with regions of various types in terms of their structure and functions. In particular, it concerns the internal economic ties or "linkages" among activities and interests that give a region organic entity and make it a useful unit for description, analysis, administration, planning, and policy.After an understanding of the nature of regions is developed in Chapter 9, our attention turns to growth and change and to the usefulness and desirability of locational changes, as distinct from rationalizations of observed behavior or patterns. Chapter 10 deals specifically with people andtheir personal locational preferences; it is a necessary prelude to the consideration of regional and urban development and policy that follows. Migration is the central topic, since people most clearly express their locational likes and dislikes by moving. Some insight into the factors that determine who moves where, and when, is needed by anyone trying to foresee population changes (such as regional and community planners and developers, utility companies, and the like). This insight is even more important in connection with framing public policies aimed at relieving regional or local poverty and unemployment.Chapters 11and 12, dealing with regional development and related policy issues, are concerned wit the region as a whole plus a still higher level of concern; namely, the national interest in the welfare and growth of the nation's constituent regions. Chapter 11, building on the concepts of regional structure developed in Chapter 9, concentrates on the process and causes of regional growth and change. Viewing the region as a live organism, we develop a basic understanding of its anatomy and physiology. Chapter 12 proposes appropriate objectives for regional development (involving, that is, the definition of regional economic "health"). It analyzes the economic ills to which regions are heir (pathology) and ventures to assess the merits of various kinds of policy to help distressed regions (therapeutics).Throughout this text, evidence of the special significance of the "urban" region will be found. Discussions of economies associated with the spatial concentration of activity, land use, and regional development and policy have important urban dimensions. It is fitting, the, that the last chapter of the text, Chapter 13, focuses on some major present-day urban problems and possible curative or palliative measures. Attention is given to four areas of concern (downtown blight, poverty, urban transport, and urban fiscal distress) in which spatial economic relationships are particularly important and the relevance of our specialized approach is therefore strong.It is hoped that this discussion has served to create an awareness of some basic factors governing the spatial distribution of economic activity and their importance in a larger setting. The course of study on which we are about to embark will introduce a framework for understanding the mechanisms by which these factors have effect. It holds out the prospect of developing perspective on associated problems and a basis for the analysis of those problems and their consequences.SELECTED READINGSMartin Beckmann, Location Theory (New York: Random House, 1968).Edgar M. Hoover, "Spatial Economics: Partial Equilibrium Approach," in Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences (New York: Macmillan, 1968).Walter Isard, Location and Space-Economy (Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1956).August Lösch, Die räumliche Ordnung der Wirtschaft (Jena: Gustav Fischer, 1940; 2nd ed., 1944); W. H. Woglom (tr.), The Economics of Location (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1954).Leon Moses, "Spatial Economics: General Equilibrium Approach," in Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences (New York: Macmillan, 1968).Hugh O. Nourse, Regional Economics (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1968).Harry W. Richardson, "The State of Regional Economics," International Regional Science Review, 3, 1 (Fall 1978), 1-48.Harry W. Richardson, Regional Economics (Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1979).ENDNOTES1. A point of departure for Lösch's work was that of a predecessor, the geographer Walter Christaller, whose studies were more empirically oriented.An Introduction to Regional EconomicsEdgar M. Hoover and Frank Giarratani2 Individual Location Decisions2.1 LEVELS OF ANAL YSIS AND LOCATION UNITSLater in this book we shall come to grips with some major questions of locational and regional macroeconomics; our concern will be with such large and complex entities as neighborhoods, occupational labor groups, cities, industries, and regions. We begin here, however, on a microeconomic level by examining the behavior of the individual components that make up those larger groups. These individual units will be referred to as location units.Just how microscopic a view one takes is a matter of choice. Within the economic system there are major producing sectors, such as manufacturing; within the manufacturing sector are various industries. An industry includes many firms; a firm may operate many different plants, warehouses, and other establishments. Within a manufacturing establishment there may be several buildings located in some more or less rational relation to one another. Various departments may occupy locations within one building; within one department there is a location pattern of individual operations and pieces of equipment, such as punch presses, desks, or wastebaskets.At each of the levels indicated, the spatial disposition of the units in question must be considered: industries, plants, buildings, departments, wastebaskets, or whatever. Although determinations of actual or desirable locations at different levels share some elements,1 there are substantial differences in the principles involved and the methods used. Thus, it is necessary to specify the level to which one is referring.We shall start with a microscopic but not ultramicroscopic view, ignoring for the most part (despite their enticements in the way of immediacy, practicality, and amenability to some highly sophisticated lines of spatial analysis) such issues as the disposition of departments or equipment within a business establishment or ski lifts on a mountainside or electric outlets in a house. Our smallest location units will be defined at the level of the individual dwelling unit, the farm, the factory, the store, or other business establishment, and so on. These units are of three broad types: residential, business, and public. Some location units can make independent choices and are their own "decision units"; others (such as branch offices or chain store outlets) are located by external decision.Many individual persons represent separate residential units by virtue of their status as self-supporting unmarried adults; but a considerably larger number do not. In the United States in 1980, only about one person in twelve lived alone. About 44 percent of the population were living in couples (mostly married); nearly 30 percent were dependent children under eighteen; and a substantial fraction of the remainder were aged, invalid, or otherwise dependent members of family households, or were locationally constrained as members of the armed forces, inmates of institutions, members of monastic orders, and so on. For these types of people, the residential location unit is a group of persons.In the business world, the firm is the unit that makes locational decisions (the location decision unit), but the "establishment" (plant, store, bank branch, motel, theater, warehouse, and。

经济学基础与应用双语PPT全套课件

经济学基础与应用双语PPT全套课件
上大学还是去工作? 学习还是出去约会? 去上课还是睡觉?
2. The cost of something is what you give up to get it
某东西的成本就是为得到它所放弃的东西
The opportunity cost of an item is what you give up to obtain that item. 机会成本——为了得到某种东西所
households decide what to buy and who to work for. Firms decide who to hire and what to produce.
6. 市场通常是组织经济活动的一种好方法
市场经济——当许多企业和家庭在 物品与劳务市场上相互交易时通过 他们的分散决策配置资源的经济。
The standard of living depends on a country’s production. Prices rise when the government prints too much money. Society faces a short-run tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.
1. People face tradeoffs.
Efficiency v. Equity
Efficiency means society gets the most that it can from its scarce resources. Equity means the benefits of those resources are distributed fairly among the members of society.

第五章 城市空间增长与中心—外围结构 《区域经济学》PPT课件

第五章  城市空间增长与中心—外围结构  《区域经济学》PPT课件
• 1、过度强化,不论经济上还是社会发展上,都会使核 心区付出更大的代价,因而必须把这种“自我强化” 控制在一定限度。
• 2、边缘区不断接受核心区的创新信息,参与创新活动 ,自身也会生成新的核心区或强化原有的较低能源的 小核心区,最终形成与原有高层级核心区相连接的“ 城市群体”
二、克鲁格曼的中心—外围结构模型
• 2.“借鸡生蛋”。 新增长中心完全有可能利用原增 长中心的资金和成功的经验和技术,保持较高的发展 速度,在较短的时间内赶上原增长中心,改变现有的经 济实力的布局。
• 3.“创造性破坏”。新技术的逐渐改进和日臻完善, 技术相对落后的地区最终赶上并超越领先者。
(三)新增长点向新增长中心的转移
• 1.选择新增长点的条件(亚中心成长起来条件) • 第一,亚中心区必须要比原有的经济中心具有更强的比
传统城镇、工业卫星城与新城之间的关系
新城
卫星城
传统市镇
目的
疏解城市中心人口、吸 疏解中心城市工业和人 城市与乡村的枢纽、农
引农村转移劳动力就业
口压力
村城镇化的承载地
区位
独立于中心城区,与中心 城区有永久性的绿地分

处于大城市远郊区
分布零散
功能
人口和就业岗位相对平
衡,具有居住、就业和购 物等城市功能
其作用也是有限度的。
城—区经济非均衡增长与空间结构
• 区域经济空间的运动,是人类社会经济活动区位选择 的结果;是各种社会经济活动在地域空间分化、组合 、聚集的动态过程;是社会经济系统与其环境之间、 系统内部各子系统之间经常的相互联系和相互作用在
地域空间的表现;也是它们之间的劳动力流、物质流 、资金流、能源流、信息流等传输的动态的过程。区
第五章 城市空间增长与中心—外围结构
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What is different in the regional case, is that because we are dealing with regions inside a country, labour and capital are free to move anywhere in the country at the discretion of the individual worker or owner of capital. Which brings us back to the issue of how markets adjust and what government involvement in regional development should encompass.
In many respects, the issue of regional development is comparable to the issue of international development. The former is concerned with how to encourage development in less developed regions of a country and narrow the gap in economic well-being between regions while the latter is concerned with the same questions but at the country level.
When this happens, the supply of workers in A will rise and the supply of workers in B will fall.
When the supply of workers goes up, all other things equal, the wage rate paid to workers will fall.
There is a difference between Asking how to encourage development in a region Asking how to make all regions equal in terms of development and Asking how to narrow the gap in income and other indicators between regions.
But more significantly, there are major restrictions on the mobility of labour between countries.
Most countries have strict immigration laws that control the movement of workers across borders.
An example of the latter is when we talk about the region of South-East Asia. An example of the former is when we talk about the western provinces of China.
In the most general sense, regional development is about facilitating/creating development in different parts of a country. But our concern will specifically focus on poor regions and how they can be made to “catch-up” to the national average in development. This means that we want to look at why differences exist in the first place and what can be done about it in the second place.
In this case, government interference will impede the adjustment of markets and cause the problem of regional disparities to be perpetuated.
In practice, this market adjustment mechanism does not work as the theory predicts, at least not to the point where disparities are eliminated.
Suppose we have two regions, A and B.
Assume A is a high-wage, high-income region and B is a low-wage, low-income region.
If labour is free to move from B to A, then the relatively higher wage in A will cause workers to move to A and leave B.
At the country level, there may be barriers to mobility of both capital and labour. Capital in today’s world has become much more mobile than was the case, say, 50 years ago or even twenty years ago. But there are still restrictions in many countries on the flow of financial capital in and out of a country.
Regional disparities refer to the fact that when a country grows, not all parts of the country may grow equally. This means that, over time, a gap may open up between regions. This gap may be in income, employment, social development, or all of these.
Why not?
Not all workers are the same. Workers in B may not have the skills required for jobs in A. Some people may not want to move for personal or non-economic reasons. Government rules and programs may reduce incentives to move or increase incentives to stay. Workers in the high wage region will not support equalization if this means their wages will fall. Markets are not perfect.
WA > WB before migration WA falls and WB rises with migration When WA = WB, migration stops
In this type of perfectly functioning market, income/worker converges across regions and regional disparities will be eliminated.
Income disparities are what we will be mainly concerned with but usually, when a region lags behind in income, it will also lag in many, perhaps most, other areas as well.
Regional development refers to the economic development of a region. Our emphasis will be focused on less developed regions, or what sometimes are simply referred to as poor regions. And how they can be developed so that they catch up with thห้องสมุดไป่ตู้ more developed or rich regions of a country.
But there is a significant difference between the case of regions within a country and whole countries and this has to do with the mobility of factors of production.
One school of thought argues that the market will not create equality across regions and therefore, government intervention is required if this result is to be achieved.
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