Title: How to approach urban competitiveness in the ICT age
1How to approach urban competitiveness in the ICT
age?
- Paul Drewe
- Delft University of Technology
- The Netherlands
-
La compétitivité urbaine à lère de la nouvelle
économie enjeux et défis Colloque de
lAssociation dÉconomie Politique (AÉP) Montréal
2005
2Montreal, the worst city for business?
3The menu
- Urban competitiveness some conventional
approaches
1.1 Regional science or spatial economics
1.2 Surveys
of location factors
1.3 Ranking cities - How about the new science of networks?
- The spatial dimension of competitiveness a
matching of networks - A word about the new economy
- Limits to urban groth the challenge of
sustainability - Savoir pour agir by way of tentative
conclusion
4Urban competitiveness some conventional
approaches
- Existing approaches such as spatial economics,
surveys of location factors and city rankings
fall short of understanding urban
competitiveness, in particular because ICT is
making a difference.
5Regional science or spatial economics
- the key concepts of distance, accessibility,
transport cost and choice of location need to be
rethought in the light of ICT developments - time needs to be property conceptualized and
logistics be incorporated - there is a general lack of empirical testing of
ideas and of practice-orientedness
6Surveys of location factors
- a single overriding location factor does not
exist (which precludes the construction of a
simple location model) - types of economic activity matter
- there are also critical factors at country level
- surveys are purely descriptive they do not
explain actual company decisions with regard to
mobile investment
7Best cities for business
- rankings depend on
- the choice of indicators, mostly ad hoc
- the weights attached to them in order to produce
an overall score of apples and oranges
(weighting procedures are not always made
explicit) - the winners are happy and use the results in
city marketing whereas losers question the
method and urge politicians to action - e.g. Pour une rayonnement européen des
métropoles Françaises 50 grands projects pour
une France attractive dans une Europe dynamique.
8Best cities for business
- In order to deal properly with ICT, the
performance of e.g. the Internet must be measured
as it depends on geographic location, backbone
connectivity, and network infrasctucture.
9The new science of networks
- the market, a direct network composed of
- nodes, i.e. all potential economic players such
as business firms, financial institutions and
governments
- links, quantifying various interactions between
economic players dealing with purchases and
sales, RD, design, marketing, logistics and the
like - competitiveness, seen from a network angle
- there are many nodes with only a few
links
and consequently a low degree
of
competitiveness,but only a few
highly
competitive nodes with a large
number of links
Source Barabasi, 2002
10The spatial dimension of competitiveness a
matching of networks
- a network(ed) firm can operate on different
levels - agglomerated
- deagglomerated
- dispersed within countries
- Worldwide
- provided the networks match
- ICT Internet infrastructure
- traditional infrastructure (road,rail,seaports
airports) - RD creation
- F2F contact (buzz or urban quality of life)
- summary
- le territoire aménagé par les réseaux (Musso
et al) - the death of distance but not the death of
geography (Gorman)
11A word about the new economy
- the new economy appears less like a new
economy than like an old economy that has access
to a new technology The
old economy of established companies and the new
economy of dot-coms are merging and it will be
difficult to distinguish them (Porter, 2001)
12Limits to urban groth the challenge of
sustainability
- a working hypothesis
- Living and producing in cities of high
population density seen from an aggregate point
of view is advantageous as far as economic
benefits and certain social (public-good)
benefits are concerned, but only at the price of
high social as well as economic costs. - (The reverse holds for cities or regions of
lesser density) - Best cities fot business may collide with most
liveable cities - sustainable urban development
- a balanced development of society, economy and
environment.
13Savoir pour agir by way of tentative
conclusion
- the 21st century will be a century of uncertainty
and hence of scenarios. But to practice the art
of the long view, it is crucial to identify
those areas that can be controlled by means of
strategic interventions - a Glocal scenario of top companies and local
innovative milieux - if strategic interventions are to achieve a
sustainable urban development, then they should
not be limited to technological innovations, but
boost social innovations, too
14There are still more questions than answers.But
this makes for interesting avenues of research.