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Journal Article

Delineating Metropolitan Areas Using Land Prices

Journal of Regional Science, 48(1): 131-163

Authors

  • Bode
  • E.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1111/j.1467-9787.2008.00544.x

JEL Classification

C21 C52 R12 R14

Key Words

economies of urban agglomeration

land price gradient

metropolitan areas

urban economics

This paper proposes an approach to delineating metropolitan areas that is more general than the standard approaches in three respects: First, it uses the fraction of land prices attribut¬able to economies of urban agglomeration instead of using commuting intensities as an indicator of economic integration between metropolitan centers and their hinterlands. Second, it identifies metropolitan centers endogenously instead of determining them exoge¬nously. And third, it takes metropolitan subcenters explicitly into account. An empirical illustration is used to show that the approach tends to delineate fewer but larger metropoli¬tan areas in densely populated regions, and smaller metropolitan areas in sparsely populated regions.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Dr. Eckhardt Bode
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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