Title: Should LDCs Fight Urban Sprawl
1Should LDCs Fight Urban Sprawl? Â
Jan K. Brueckner
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign   Â
Many observers think that the spatial expansion
of U.S. cities has been excessive. Â Â Â This
attitude is captured in the critical phrase
urban sprawl.
2The smart growth movement in the U.S. is trying
to curb urban expansion. Â Â Â Urban growth
boundaries (UGBs) are a favored tool. Â Â Â But
is urban sprawl a problem requiring government
intervention? Â Â Â Â If not, the U.S. attack on
sprawl is misguided. Â Â Â Â Same conclusion would
apply in other countries.
3Economists favor government intervention only in
the presence of market failures. Â Â Â Cities
grow spatially because of rising populations,
growing incomes, and transport improvements. Â Â Â
The question is whether this growth is amplified
by market failures.
4- Economists point to two market failures that may
affect urban growth - Â
- Â
- Â
- Failure to take account of the amenity value of
open space around cities - Failure to consider the social cost of
congestion in individual road-use decisions - Â
5Lost amenity benefits arent considered when land
is converted to urban use. Â Â Â ? Result cities
expand too much. Â Â Â Drivers ignore the road
congestion they impose on others. Â Â Â Social
cost of commuting then exceeds private cost, so
that too much commuting occurs. Â Â Â ? Result
cities expand too much.
6These market failures may justify mild government
intervention to control urban expansion, perhaps
using UGBs. Â Â Â But what if governments are
overzealous? Â Â Â Urban population will be
bottled up in a smaller city for no good reason.
7Damaging effects    ? Higher housing prices
via reduced supply of land  ? Lower housing
consumption in response to higher prices  ?
Lower standard of living    Overzealous attack
on urban sprawl can therefore contribute to urban
poverty in LDCs.
8How big are such effects? Â Â Â Simulation
analysis showed that household income would have
to rise by 7 to offset negative effects of an
overly-restrictive UGB.
9Such policies are actually in place in some
LDCs. Â Â Â Best known example is Koreas
greenbelts. Â Â Â These UGBs have been shown to
raise housing prices and reducing the standard of
living in Koreas cities. Â Â Â Lesson a
misguided attack on urban sprawl can have
damaging effects, exacerbating urban poverty in
LDCs.