1st Edition

Sources of Metropolitan Growth

By John F. McDonald Copyright 2012
    335 Pages
    by Routledge

    334 Pages
    by Routledge

    The factors that determine growth at the industry level are different for innovative versus mature industries. Growth industries rely on high-quality workers, access to capital, technical change, and numerous forms of collected economies. Mature industries concentrate on low-input costs and minimizing costs for wages, transportation, taxes, material, etc. This approach is adopted here to consider the growth and development of metropolitan economies.In twelve chapters, eminent scholars provide a complete review of what works - and what doesn't - in generating economic development. What are the potential and the reality of producer services, suburban business centers, enterprise zones, technology-based ventures, and industrial incubators? How can economic development policy improve the incubator effect? Is there a nationwide venture capital network? What are the locational requirements of firms in high-growth industries? Finally, what are the consequences of failed growth?This comprehensive collection includes chapters by Edwin S. Mills; Patricia E. Beeson; Mark A. Satterthwaite; Breandán Ó Huallacháin; John F. McDonald; William B. Beyers; Truman A. Hartshorn; Peter O. Muller; Rodney A. Erickson; Richard Florida; Donald F. Smith, Jr.; Claudia Bird Schoonhoven; Kathleen M. Eisenhardt; Stephen Nord; Robert G. Sheets; and Thomas R. Hammer. This workis a must read for policymakers, planners, analysts, and students.

    PART I Empirical Analysis of Metropolitan Growth; 1: Sectoral Clustering and Metropolitan Development; 2: Agglomeration Economies and Productivity Growth; PART II Empirical Analysis of Metropolitan Growth; 3: High-growth Industries and Uneven Metropolitan Growth; 4: Economic Structure and Growth of Metropolitan Areas; 5: Assessing the Development Status of Metropolitan Areas; PART III Empirical Analysis of Key Sectors; 6: Producer Services and Metropolitan Growth and Development; 7: The Suburban Downtown and Urban Economic Development Today; IV: Policy and Metropolitan Economic Development; 8: Enterprise Zones: Lessons from the State Government Experience; 9: Venture Capital’s Role in Economic Development: An Empirical Analysis; 10: Regions as Industrial Incubators of Technology-based Ventures; V: Economic Change and Urban Social Problems; 11: Service Industries and the Working Poor in Major Metropolitan Areas in the United States; 12: Economic Determinants of Underclass Behavior

    Biography

    John F. McDonald