Abstract

We investigate socio-economic urban scaling behavior of municipalities in Denmark, the Netherlands, and in particular in Germany. Our interest is twofold. First we investigate whether, and to what extent, scaling occurs in various types of urban areas. The second important topic of research concerns the comparison of specific types of urban areas with regard to the values of the gross urban product. This is a new approach: two scaling systems are compared not only in terms of the scaling exponent, but also in terms of the differences in the gross urban product. We are specifically interested in the role of urban governance in terms of local urban government structures. Germany is our central case because it works as a natural experiment: a large number of urban areas is one-governance, but others are not. More specifically, we distinguish between cities of which the surrounding urban area belongs to the municipality of the city (kreisfreie cities), and those specific districts (Kreise) which are urban areas consisting of several municipalities. Our findings suggest that urban areas with one municipality perform better than urban areas with fragmented governance structures. We also investigate the relation between scaling of Kreise and simple measures of centrality, including the Zipf-distribution. A strong relation is found between the measured residuals of the scaling equations and the socio-economic position of cities assessed with a set of different socio-economic indicators. Given the debate on the effectiveness of municipal reform, our results may lead to challenging conclusions about the importance of one-municipality instead of multi-municipality governance in urban areas. These results are relevant for policy as they suggest that there is a benefit to unifying the governance structure of compact urban agglomerations.

Highlights

  • IntroductionRecent studies on urban metrics shows a more than proportional (superlinear) increase of the socio-economic performance of cities (measured by the gross urban product, GUP) in relation to population size [1,2,3]

  • Introduction and backgroundRecent studies on urban metrics shows a more than proportional increase of the socio-economic performance of cities in relation to population size [1,2,3]

  • This urban scaling relation is described by a power-law dependence of gross urban product (GUP) on population size where in most cases the values of the exponent are between 1.10 and 1.20. This implies that GUP increases disproportionally with city size, each 10% increase in population size is associated with about 11.5% increase

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Summary

Introduction

Recent studies on urban metrics shows a more than proportional (superlinear) increase of the socio-economic performance of cities (measured by the gross urban product, GUP) in relation to population size [1,2,3]. This urban scaling relation is described by a power-law dependence of GUP on population size where in most cases the values of the exponent are between 1.10 and 1.20 (see section Materials and methods). This implies that GUP increases disproportionally with city size, each 10% increase in population size is associated with about 11.5% increase

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