Trade and Circuses: Explaining Urban Giants

Using theory, case studies, and cross-country evidence, we investigate the factors behind the concentration of a nation's urban population in a single city. High tariffs, high costs of internal trade, and low levels of international trade increase the degree of concentration. Even more clearly, politics (such as the degree of instability) determines urban primacy. Dictatorships have central cities that are, on average, 50 percent larger than their democratic counterparts. Using information about the timing of city growth, and a series of instruments, we conclude that the predominant causality is from political factors to urban concentration, not from concentration to political change.

[1]  R. Outhwaite,et al.  Trade and Banking in Early Modern England. , 1989 .

[2]  D. Canning,et al.  The Effects of Transportation Networks on Economic Growth , 1993 .

[3]  Paul Bairoch Cities and Economic Development , 1990 .

[4]  R. Michie The City of London , 1992 .

[5]  Andrei Shleifer,et al.  Industrialization and the Big Push , 1988, Journal of Political Economy.

[6]  E. Wrigley,et al.  Urban growth and agricultural change: England and the Continent in the early modern period , 1985 .

[7]  Economic Growth in a Cross Section of Countries , 1989 .

[8]  W. Wheaton,et al.  Urban Concentration, Agglomeration Economies, and the Level of Economic Development , 1981, Economic Development and Cultural Change.

[9]  Andrei Shleifer,et al.  Princes and Merchants: European City Growth before the Industrial Revolution , 1993, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[10]  B. Russett World Handbook Of Political And Social Indicators , 1965 .

[11]  Gary B. Nash The Urban Crucible: The Northern Seaports and the Origins of the American Revolution , 1979 .

[12]  R. Summers,et al.  The Penn World Table (Mark 5): An Expanded Set of International Comparisons, 1950-1987 , 1991 .

[13]  Lynn Harold Vogel,et al.  World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators , 1975 .

[14]  McColmFreedom House,et al.  Freedom in the World , 1993 .

[15]  Jong‐Wha Lee International Trade, Distortions, and Long-Run Economic Growth , 1993 .

[16]  Gary D. Allinson Edward Seidensticker, Low City, High City: Tokyo from Edo to the Earthquake, New York, Alfred A. Knopf. 1983. $20.00 , 1984 .

[17]  J. Scobie Buenos Aires: Plaza to suburb, 1870-1910 , 1974 .

[18]  R. Gastil Freedom in the World , 1982 .

[19]  Michael Grant,et al.  History of Rome , 1978 .

[20]  B. Hoselitz Generative and Parasitic Cities , 1955, Economic Development and Cultural Change.

[21]  J. Henderson,et al.  Economic theory and the cities , 1977 .

[22]  Kenneth A. Bollen,et al.  Political Democracy: Conceptual and Measurement Traps , 1990 .

[23]  A. Alesina,et al.  Income Distribution, Political Instability, and Investment , 1993 .

[24]  E. A. Wrigley,et al.  The population history of England, 1541-1871 : a reconstruction , 1982 .

[25]  P. Krugman,et al.  Trade Policy and the Third World Metropolis , 1992 .

[26]  Kenneth T. Rosen,et al.  The Size Distribution of Cities: An Examination of the Pareto Law and Primacy , 1980 .

[27]  E. Glaeser,et al.  Growth in Cities , 1991, Journal of Political Economy.

[28]  G. Sansom A history of Japan , 1978 .

[29]  J. Kandell LA Capital: The Biography of Mexico City , 1988 .