Urban Sprawl: Diagnosis and Remedies

This article argues that urban spatial expansion results mainly from three powerful forces: a growing population, rising incomes, and falling commuting costs. Urban growth occurring purely in response to these fundamental forces cannot be faulted as socially undesirable, but three market failures ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:International regional science review 2000-04, Vol.23 (2), p.160-171
1. Verfasser: Brueckner, Jan K.
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description This article argues that urban spatial expansion results mainly from three powerful forces: a growing population, rising incomes, and falling commuting costs. Urban growth occurring purely in response to these fundamental forces cannot be faulted as socially undesirable, but three market failures may distort their operation, upsetting the allocation of land between agricultural and urban uses and justifying criticism of urban sprawl. These are the failure to account for the benefits of open space, excessive commuting because of a failure to account for the social costs of congestion, and failure to make new development pay for the infrastructure costs it generates. Precise remedies for these market failures are two types of development taxes and congestion tolls levied on commuters. Each of these remedies leads to a reduction in the spatial size of the city.
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
subjects Commuting
Costs
Growth
Income
Population growth
Suburban areas
Urban Affairs
Urban growth
Urban planning
Urban space
title Urban Sprawl: Diagnosis and Remedies
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