Abstract

Economic resilience is a critical indicator of the sustainable development of an urban economy. This paper measures the urban economic resilience (UER) of 286 major cities in China from six indicators—economic growth, opening up, social development, environmental protection, natural conditions, and technological innovation—using a subjective and objective weighting method and the Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) methods. Furthermore, kernel density estimation (KDE) was used to reveal the spatial and temporal trends in UER across cities, and a social opportunity function was applied to access the opportunity for economic resilience and the fairness of opportunities for economic resilience in 19 urban agglomerations in China. The results show that the UER was, in general, low across all cities but increased over time. Geographically, the UER disperses from the eastern coast to inland cities. Amongst urban agglomerations in China, the economic resilience opportunity index also varies spatially and increases over time. On the other hand, the opportunity fairness index of UER remained largely stable and substantial inequalities exist across all urban agglomerations, indicating the need for differentiated policy intervention to ensure equality and the sustainable development of the region. The methodology developed in this research can also be applied in other cities and regions to test its re-applicability and to understand the UER in different contexts.

Highlights

  • The term “resilience” originates from engineering physics

  • Economists have used the concept of resilience to explain complex interactions in global markets, and used economic resilience to define the ability of an economy to respond to risks

  • Due to the impact of the economic crisis in the second half of 2008, the growth rate of the economic resilience index of most urban agglomerations slowed down agglomeration, which increased by 31.62% and 31.57%, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

The term “resilience” originates from engineering physics. The ecologist Holling (1973) used this term to describe the ability of a system to maintain stability or return to an original state after suffering an external perturbation [1]. Economists have used the concept of resilience to explain complex interactions in global markets, and used economic resilience to define the ability of an economy to respond to risks. Such resilience is the result of evolutionary interactions among the economy, the external environment, effective governance, and other determinants [2]. In order to explore the driving factors behind the heterogeneous responses across regions, the concept of urban economic resilience (UER) was introduced [5]. This concept helps to explain the regional differences in resilience after economic shocks. Urban economic resilience has become a research hotspot in urban economics, regional economics, development economics, economic geography, and other disciplines [7]

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