Fr. 69.00

Toward Balanced Growth with Economic Agglomeration - Empirical Studies of China's Urban-Rural and Interregional Development

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book explains the relationships between equality and efficiency, as well as between government and market, in urban-rural and regional development by providing theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence. Urban-rural development in China is understood from a regional perspective, while the core issue of urban-rural and regional development is cross-regional resource reallocation driven by the trends of globalization, marketization and urbanization and their influence on growth and inequality. The book puts forward the following arguments: An urban-rural and regional balance should not be achieved by limiting agglomeration effects in eastern regions. For some time now, China has lacked a suitable mechanism to enable residents in underdeveloped and rural areas to share in the achievements of economic agglomeration. As a result, China should not slow down economic agglomeration and development in eastern regions simply by depending on administrative means to balance urban-rural and regional development. In the final analysis, arriving at a regional balance depends on growth in the eastern regions, provided a reasonable mechanism is implemented to enable inland areas to share in the development achievements of eastern regions. In turn, finding an urban-regional balance rests on urban development, as long as more rural workers can move to and prosper in cities.

List of contents

Introduction.- Urban-rural integration and spatial agglomeration during urbanization in China.- How should China maintain growth while balancing regional development.- Globalization and Regional Income Inequality in China.- Economic Opening and Domestic Market Integration.- Urban-rural Inequality and regional economic growth in China.

Summary

This book explains the relationships between equality and efficiency, as well as between government and market, in urban-rural and regional development by providing theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence. Urban-rural development in China is understood from a regional perspective, while the core issue of urban-rural and regional development is cross-regional resource reallocation driven by the trends of globalization, marketization and urbanization and their influence on growth and inequality. The book puts forward the following arguments: An urban-rural and regional balance should not be achieved by limiting agglomeration effects in eastern regions. For some time now, China has lacked a suitable mechanism to enable residents in underdeveloped and rural areas to share in the achievements of economic agglomeration. As a result, China should not slow down economic agglomeration and development in eastern regions simply by depending on administrative means to balance urban-rural and regional development. In the final analysis, arriving at a regional balance depends on growth in the eastern regions, provided a reasonable mechanism is implemented to enable inland areas to share in the development achievements of eastern regions. In turn, finding an urban-regional balance rests on urban development, as long as more rural workers can move to and prosper in cities.

Product details

Authors Zha Chen, Zhao Chen, Ming Lu
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2015
 
EAN 9783662474112
ISBN 978-3-662-47411-2
No. of pages 138
Dimensions 162 mm x 244 mm x 11 mm
Weight 369 g
Illustrations VII, 138 p. 21 illus.
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Business > Economics

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