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1990 | Buch

Spatial Structures

verfasst von: Professor Dr. Martin J. Beckmann, Professor Dr. Tönu Puu

Verlag: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

Buchreihe : Advances in Spatial and Network Economics

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Über dieses Buch

The common theme in the essays of this book is the emergence and sur­ vival of spatial structures. How are economic structures created in an otherwise homogeneous environment? The answer must be sought through an analysis of economic forces that operate in the two dimensional contin­ uum of space. Ultimately these forces emanate from the fundamental fact that spatial concentration is needed to reap increasing returns to scale. i. e. to gather the fruits of the division of labour. Adam Smith's dictum: "The division of labour is limited by the size of the market" poses a fundamental question to spatial economic analysis: just how do markets operate when extended over distances? Although these essays were written at different times they all relate to the problem of economic structures generated in spatial markets. They approach the phenomena of spatial order from different angles, but it is hoped in a connected and logically consistent way. We thank the editors and publishers of the Annals of Regional Science for permission to reprint parts of the articles "On the Shape and Size of Market Areas" and "Population Growth and Dispersal" to be published this year. It is our pleasure to thank Mrs. I. Strohlein for drawing several figures and Dr. H. Mittermeier for compiling the index. Last not least we are grateful to Mrs. B. Schwarzwalder for her patient job of typing and retyping this manuscript.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. The Genesis of Economic Centers: A Bifurcation Model
Abstract
Fernand Braudel in “Civilization and Capitalism” (1979) designates the lowering of transportation costs as the prime motive force behind the development of the world economy. In his historical treatment of the matter transportation costs are of course very general, including such things as robbery by the medieval knights. Intuitively, it seems sound that specialization and spatial concentrations of population favour efficient mass production using increasing returns and division of labour. That this in turn depends on decreasing the impedance of communication is obvious. In this chapter we want to see how this works out with respect to increasing returns. Later we will return to this issue by taking a closer look at the concentration of population.
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
2. The Integrated State: von Thünen revisited
Abstract
In the first chapter spatial concentration of production emerged as a result of increasing returns to scale. These prevail even in the face of increasing transportation costs incurred in the distribution of the product.
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
3. The Shape and Size of Löschian Market Areas
Abstract
In this chapter we return to the perfectly homogeneous plain settled by a population at a uniform density. Let a consumption good be produced in economic centers rather than in all locations for the reasons discussed in chapter 1. The problem to be studied in this chapter concerns to spacing -or density- of such centers and the shape of their market areas. Two questions arise: what spacing is optimal and what spacing results under free entry into a spatial market with specified conditions of competition?
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
4. Hotelling’s Migration Model: The Steady State
Abstract
Economic inequalities are forever subject to forces of erosion. In two-dimensional space these take the particular form of diffusion. In the words of Hotelling “A … tendency to spread out, to go from places of greater to places of less density appears in various phenomena connected with human society … Human beings themselves show a marked tendency to spread out” (Hotelling p.1225).
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
5. Migration Model with Production
Abstract
One disadvantage of the original Hotelling (1921) model is that the supply of means of subsistance is taken as a given constant, independent of time and of population (labour force). The model is indeed more suitable in biology than in economics, as demonstrated by its sucess in the former field after it was rediscovered by Skellam 30 years after Hotelling.
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
6. Catastrophe Theory Applied to the Refraction of Traffic
Abstract
One of the main issues of these contributions concerns how macroscopic structure — like market areas, agglomerations, and the like — arise though no spatial inhomogeneities are present. Resources are assumed to be mobile, generally there are no local productivity differences assumed, and transportation flows do not necessarily conform to any preassigned radial patterns.
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
7. The Weberian Location Triangle
Abstract
Moses (1958) places the location problem firmly in the setting of production theory and concludes that the problem of location must be solved in connection with the choice of operation scale and technology. Only if the technology is of the Leontief type with fixed coefficients and has constant returns to scale can the location decision be dissociated from the production decision.
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
8. Order from Disorder
Abstract
Suppose that a resource (oil, ore, coal, fertile land, water) is available at a given density q(x1, x2). The resource may be transported at a given cost k or else it is immobile but its product may be so transported. The labor requirements for this transformation activity are small and may be neglected. Also the labor input into transportation is assumed to have no immediate effect on the distribution of population.
Martin J. Beckmann, Tönu Puu
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Spatial Structures
verfasst von
Professor Dr. Martin J. Beckmann
Professor Dr. Tönu Puu
Copyright-Jahr
1990
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Electronic ISBN
978-3-642-75277-3
Print ISBN
978-3-642-75279-7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-75277-3