Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development

Place matters for productivity and prosperity. Myriad factors support a successful place, including not only the hard infrastructure such as roads, but also the softer elements such as worker skills, entrepreneurial ability, and well-functioning institutions. History suggests that prosperous places tend to persist, while “left-behind” regions—or those hurt by climatic, technological, or commercial shocks—struggle to catch up. This division gives rise to demands to “do something” about the subsequent spatial inequality. Such pressures often result in costly spatially targeted policies with disappointing outcomes because of a lack of analysis of the underlying barriers to growth and structural transformation and a fair appraisal of the possibility of overcoming them. The latest volume of the World Bank Productivity Project series, Place, Productivity, and Prosperity: Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development makes three broad contributions. First, it provides new analytical and empirical insights into the three drivers of economic geography—agglomeration economies, migration, and distance—and the way in which these drivers interact. Second, it argues that these forces are playing out differently in developing countries than they have in advanced economies: urbanization is not accompanied by structural transformation, leaving cities crowded and accruing all the negative aspects of urbanization without being concentrated productively. Long-term amelioration of poverty in lagging regions requires advancing the overall national agenda of structural change and productivity growth. Third, it provides a heuristic framework with which to inform policy makers’ assessments of place-based policy proposals, helping them identify the regions where policy is likely to have an impact and those that would remain nonviable. The framework enables governments to clarify the implications of various policy options; to think critically about design priorities, including necessary complementary policies; and to navigate the implementation challenges.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Grover, Arti, Lall, Somik V., Maloney, William F.
Format: Book biblioteca
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022-01-21
Subjects:REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT, SPATIAL ECONOMICS, INFRASTRUCTURE, URBAN PLANNING, AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS, MIGRATION, CONNECTIVITY, URBANIZATION, STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION, LAGGING REGION, POVERTY REDUCTION, TRANSPORT CORRIDOR, SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE, PRODUCTIVITY, PLACE-BASED POLICY, JOBS GROWTH, BIG PUSH,
Online Access:https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099130101182238029/p1725410c234ba07b09c830164516b4a4df
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36843
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spelling dig-okr-10986368432022-01-22T05:10:38Z Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development Grover, Arti Lall, Somik V. Maloney, William F. REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT SPATIAL ECONOMICS INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN PLANNING AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS MIGRATION CONNECTIVITY URBANIZATION STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION LAGGING REGION POVERTY REDUCTION MIGRATION TRANSPORT CORRIDOR SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE PRODUCTIVITY PLACE-BASED POLICY JOBS GROWTH BIG PUSH Place matters for productivity and prosperity. Myriad factors support a successful place, including not only the hard infrastructure such as roads, but also the softer elements such as worker skills, entrepreneurial ability, and well-functioning institutions. History suggests that prosperous places tend to persist, while “left-behind” regions—or those hurt by climatic, technological, or commercial shocks—struggle to catch up. This division gives rise to demands to “do something” about the subsequent spatial inequality. Such pressures often result in costly spatially targeted policies with disappointing outcomes because of a lack of analysis of the underlying barriers to growth and structural transformation and a fair appraisal of the possibility of overcoming them. The latest volume of the World Bank Productivity Project series, Place, Productivity, and Prosperity: Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development makes three broad contributions. First, it provides new analytical and empirical insights into the three drivers of economic geography—agglomeration economies, migration, and distance—and the way in which these drivers interact. Second, it argues that these forces are playing out differently in developing countries than they have in advanced economies: urbanization is not accompanied by structural transformation, leaving cities crowded and accruing all the negative aspects of urbanization without being concentrated productively. Long-term amelioration of poverty in lagging regions requires advancing the overall national agenda of structural change and productivity growth. Third, it provides a heuristic framework with which to inform policy makers’ assessments of place-based policy proposals, helping them identify the regions where policy is likely to have an impact and those that would remain nonviable. The framework enables governments to clarify the implications of various policy options; to think critically about design priorities, including necessary complementary policies; and to navigate the implementation challenges. 2022-01-19T16:03:16Z 2022-01-19T16:03:16Z 2022-01-21 Book https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099130101182238029/p1725410c234ba07b09c830164516b4a4df 978-1-4648-1670-3 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36843 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Publication
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
topic REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
SPATIAL ECONOMICS
INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN PLANNING
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS
MIGRATION
CONNECTIVITY
URBANIZATION
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
LAGGING REGION
POVERTY REDUCTION
MIGRATION
TRANSPORT CORRIDOR
SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE
PRODUCTIVITY
PLACE-BASED POLICY
JOBS GROWTH
BIG PUSH
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
SPATIAL ECONOMICS
INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN PLANNING
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS
MIGRATION
CONNECTIVITY
URBANIZATION
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
LAGGING REGION
POVERTY REDUCTION
MIGRATION
TRANSPORT CORRIDOR
SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE
PRODUCTIVITY
PLACE-BASED POLICY
JOBS GROWTH
BIG PUSH
spellingShingle REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
SPATIAL ECONOMICS
INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN PLANNING
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS
MIGRATION
CONNECTIVITY
URBANIZATION
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
LAGGING REGION
POVERTY REDUCTION
MIGRATION
TRANSPORT CORRIDOR
SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE
PRODUCTIVITY
PLACE-BASED POLICY
JOBS GROWTH
BIG PUSH
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
SPATIAL ECONOMICS
INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN PLANNING
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS
MIGRATION
CONNECTIVITY
URBANIZATION
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
LAGGING REGION
POVERTY REDUCTION
MIGRATION
TRANSPORT CORRIDOR
SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE
PRODUCTIVITY
PLACE-BASED POLICY
JOBS GROWTH
BIG PUSH
Grover, Arti
Lall, Somik V.
Maloney, William F.
Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development
description Place matters for productivity and prosperity. Myriad factors support a successful place, including not only the hard infrastructure such as roads, but also the softer elements such as worker skills, entrepreneurial ability, and well-functioning institutions. History suggests that prosperous places tend to persist, while “left-behind” regions—or those hurt by climatic, technological, or commercial shocks—struggle to catch up. This division gives rise to demands to “do something” about the subsequent spatial inequality. Such pressures often result in costly spatially targeted policies with disappointing outcomes because of a lack of analysis of the underlying barriers to growth and structural transformation and a fair appraisal of the possibility of overcoming them. The latest volume of the World Bank Productivity Project series, Place, Productivity, and Prosperity: Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development makes three broad contributions. First, it provides new analytical and empirical insights into the three drivers of economic geography—agglomeration economies, migration, and distance—and the way in which these drivers interact. Second, it argues that these forces are playing out differently in developing countries than they have in advanced economies: urbanization is not accompanied by structural transformation, leaving cities crowded and accruing all the negative aspects of urbanization without being concentrated productively. Long-term amelioration of poverty in lagging regions requires advancing the overall national agenda of structural change and productivity growth. Third, it provides a heuristic framework with which to inform policy makers’ assessments of place-based policy proposals, helping them identify the regions where policy is likely to have an impact and those that would remain nonviable. The framework enables governments to clarify the implications of various policy options; to think critically about design priorities, including necessary complementary policies; and to navigate the implementation challenges.
format Book
topic_facet REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
SPATIAL ECONOMICS
INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN PLANNING
AGGLOMERATION ECONOMICS
MIGRATION
CONNECTIVITY
URBANIZATION
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
LAGGING REGION
POVERTY REDUCTION
MIGRATION
TRANSPORT CORRIDOR
SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE
PRODUCTIVITY
PLACE-BASED POLICY
JOBS GROWTH
BIG PUSH
author Grover, Arti
Lall, Somik V.
Maloney, William F.
author_facet Grover, Arti
Lall, Somik V.
Maloney, William F.
author_sort Grover, Arti
title Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development
title_short Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development
title_full Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development
title_fullStr Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development
title_full_unstemmed Place, Productivity, and Prosperity : Revisiting Spatially Targeted Policies for Regional Development
title_sort place, productivity, and prosperity : revisiting spatially targeted policies for regional development
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022-01-21
url https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099130101182238029/p1725410c234ba07b09c830164516b4a4df
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36843
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