Title: LOCATION
1LOCATION
2Theories of Location
- Residential location or the location of people
- Location of firms
3- The human race is, and has always been, a race of
migrants - evolved on the African savannahs and began
walking out into Europe and Asia - moved and settled and populated areas and then
moved on to new areas. - Some times we had to leave because of the
environment, the weather, climate changes,
economic conditions, persecution etc and
sometimes we went because we wanted to . - But for all those reasons combined, movement of
people is a complex behavior with important
regional ramifications.
4Residential Location Theory
- Residential location theory or what is usually
termed migration theory deals with people moving.
5Important Questions
- Why do people move? How much is economic,
social, political, forced, etc. - When do people move?
- When people migrate, what determines their
destination? - What sorts of formal and informal institutions
arise because of migration? - What is the effect of migration on the people who
move? - What is the effect of migration on the people
left behind? - What is the effect of migration on the place
left? - What is the effect of migration on people in the
destination area? - What is the effect of migration on the
destination area?
6- Now, beyond these questions are explanations
dealing with interregional migration as distinct
from international migration. - There are of course, some obvious differences.
- International migration is more likely to
involve language differences and higher costs of
assimilation, as well as more political reasons
and implications. - But, it is my contention that the same theory
should apply to both.
7Why do we care?
- We care because there are consequences to
migration - Consequences in the place of origin (some
governments have actually developed laws to
encourage out migration) - These include Turkey, the Phillipines, South
Korea, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Mexico and Sri
Lanka.
8Why would a country want to encourage out
migration?
- IN some cases it is to help keep pace with their
expanding labor force. Since their arent enough
jobs at home, people are encouraged to go - In some cases, like Egypt and India, the
educational systems are producing far more highly
educated workers than can be accommodated. - Placing such workers in western industrialized
countries also tends to produce large inflows of
valuable hard currency for the country of origin. - In some cases emigration is promoted specifically
for selected ethnic groups or those that oppose
the government of the origin country.
9- On the other hand there may be serious
consequences of migration for the origin place - Migration is highly selective and those who are
most able to leave a declining area and most
likely to find jobs in a growing destination area
are also the most educated and skilled and this
means there may be a serious brain drain. - Additionally when many people leave an area and
then suddenly return there can also be both
positive and negative effects. Such cases occur
in situation of political turmoil which comes to
an end and refugees return.
10Consequences in the Destination Place
- Migration can alter ethnic, racial, cultural, and
even political composition of the receiving area.
This is not only true for international
migration but also for interregional migration.
Areas of Detroit, Chicago, New York, and St.
Louis can all attest to racial changes - And once international migrants get to a
destination area, their internal migrations may
also have such consequences-Nashville and Memphis
are clear cases of such migration. - Such sudden change may cause social conflict and
even violence.
11There are also costs and benefits of migration
for social services and entitlement programs as
well as taxation systems and tax revenues
- Migrants cause pressure on health care systems,
educational systems, public infrastructure, and
social welfare.
12Regional Origins of Immigrants to the United
States, Selected YearsImmigrants (in thousands)
Source Immigration and Naturalization
Service, 1998 Statistical Yearbook.
13Why do people move?
- People move in order to better them selves (that
is for economic reasons) - They also move because of fear of political or
other repression or persecution - Finally they move because they simply want to
pursue some dream or see whats around the next
corner
14push factors or pull factors
- Push factors are those circumstances that cause
you to want to leave somewhere. It might be high
unemployment or generally poor economic
conditions, it might be a war or famine. - Pull factors, on the other hand are those
factors which tend to draw migrants to a specific
place. Pull factors can include low
unemployment, high wages, or a generally booming
economy with lots of perceived opportunities,
availability of land, availability of housing,
lower crime rates or simply a more open society.
15Population change for a region comes from four
components
- Births
- Deaths
- In-migration
- Out-migration
The rate of expansion of population due to births
minus deaths is referred to as the natural rate
of population increase. The most difficult
components to predict, of course, are in and out-
migration. Regions find it difficult to regulate
migration at all, while countries with borders
which can be controlled to varying degrees are
more likely to try to control migration and
produce government policies for migration.
16Migration TheoryFirst we shall present a few of
the more well-known theories from other fields
and then we will move into the economic theories.
- Ravenstein
- Stouffer
- Lee
- Zelinsky
- Neoclassical economics
- The new economics of migration
- Dual labor market theory
- World systems theory
- Network theory
- Institutional theory
- Cumulative causation
17Ravenstein
- Ravenstein put forward what have been termed the
Laws of Migration, in the 1880s, based on
observation of patterns in Great Britain,
supplemented by data from the United States - most migrants travel short distances
- migration proceeds step by step
- longer distance migrants prefer to go to
great centres of commerce or industry - each stream of migration produces a
counter_stream
18- urban dwellers are less migratory than people
in rural areas - females are more migratory than males in
internal migration, but males are more common in
international migration - large towns owe more of their growth to
migration than natural increase - the volume of migration increases with the
development of industry and commerce and as
transport improves - most migration is from the agricultural
areas to centres of commerce and industry - the main causes of migration are economic.
19Stouffer
- the level of movement between two places is
dependent on the number of intervening
opportunities between them - Intervening opportunities are the nature and
number of possible alternative migration
destinations which may exist between place A
(migration origin) and place B (migration
destination).
20- the nature of places, rather than distance, is
more important in determining where migrants go. - People will move from place A to place B based on
the real, or the perceived, opportunity at place
B (e.g. work). - the number of people moving over a given distance
is directly proportional to the number of
opportunities at that distance, and inversely
proportional to the number of intervening
opportunities.
21Lee
- Lee tried to explain the factors affecting
migration in terms of the positive and negative
characteristics of both the origin and
destination. - Migrants must expect to receive some added
advantage in moving from one place to another.
22- potential movements from an origin ( such as a
rural area) to a final destination (such as a
city) are likely to be influenced by obstacles at
either source or destination, or en route - Such obstacles might include family pressures,
misinformation, national policy, travel costs,
lack of capital, illiteracy, military service and
language. - the same feature might be perceived differently
by different individuals _ some might welcome the
opportunity to live in a large city, with all the
facilities it might offer, whereas others might
find it cramped and depressing.
23Zelinsky
- transition to patterns of migration just as there
is for demographic change. In his model there are
five stages - (i) in a pre_industrial society there is little
residential migration and limited movement
between areas - (ii) an early transitional stage of considerable
rural_urban migration and the colonization of new
lands, with the associated growth of longer
distance migration (often in the form of
emigration)
24- (iii) in the third stage, rural _ urban migration
continues and there is a rapid rise in migration
between cities - (iv) rural _ urban migration may continue but at
a markedly reduced rate residential migration
remains high, but in the form of migration in and
between cities rather than emigration. There may
be some immigration of unskilled workers, and
highly trained professional workers may be
exchanged between countries as a result of the
operations of multi_national companies
25- (v) Advanced societies will have almost
exclusively inter_ or intra_ urban migration
although new technology will reduce the need for
migration and there will be less need for some
types of circulation such as long_distance
journeys_to_work. Mobility between and within
countries may be affected by state legislation.
26Neoclassical economics
- macro theory)
- views geographic differences in the supply and
demand for labor in origin and destination
countries as the major factors driving individual
migration decisions. - Among the assumptions of this model are that
international migration will not occur in the
absence of these differentials, that their
elimination will bring an end to international
movements, and that labor markets (not other
markets) are the primary mechanisms inducing
movements. - Government policy interventions affect migration
by regulating or influencing labor markets in
origin and destination countries.
27Neoclassical economics
- micro theory
- focuses on the level of individual rational
actors who make decisions to migrate based upon a
cost_benefit calculation that indicates a
positive net return to movement. - Human capital characteristics that raise the
potential benefits of migration, and individual,
social, or technological factors that lower
costs, will lead to increased migration. - Differences in earnings and employment rates are
key variables, and governments influence
migration through policies that affect these
(e.g., through development policies that raise
incomes at the point of origin, decrease the
probability of employment at destination, or
increase the costs of migration).
28Classical Model of labor migration
- Assumptions
- 1.Perfect competition exists in all markets
- 2.Production functions exhibit constant returns
to scale. - 3.Factor migration is costless and there are no
other barriers to migration - 4.Factor prices are perfectly flexible
- 5.Factors of production are homogeneous
- 6. Owners of labor and capital are completely
informed about factor returns in all regions.
29- labor is hired at any given wage up to the point
that the marginal revenue product is equal to the
marginal factor cost (wage) - the law of diminishing returns states that given
some fixed input, as you add a variable input,
you evenutally get tothe point the additional
variable input yields diminishing average,
marginal and total returns. - given an equilibrium situation if we add labor we
reduce the marginal revenue product of wages and
will only hire more workers at a lower wage
30- If we lose workers then the mrp of remaining
workers rise so that we pay higher wages. - given the assumptions and these two truths, we
can see how factor price convergence comes from
migration. Assume we have some output to labor
curve in two areas, and resulting supply and
demand curves. - This of course requires perfect information, lack
of costs to move, and lack of other barriers to
migration. Very limiting assumptions. Moreover,
it ignores the differences between speculative
migration and job-in-hand moves, it ignores the
affect of amenities, psychological costs and
benefits, the bandwagon effect (or beaten path
effect) personal and family characteristics and
the institutional framework in which migration
takes place.
31The human capital model of migration (Sjaastad,
and cooke and Bailey)
- Does not assume a timeless world with
instantaneous responses. - Migrant responds to higher earnings of his
lifetime. Migrants exhibit positive time
preferences. (Sooner is better than later) so we
have to look at the present value - Rijsum t1 to T of (Yjt-Yit)/(1d)raised to the
t. - Where Rij is the gross present value of the
lifetime increment to earnings expected as a
result of migration from i to j. T is the number
of years of - working life remaining, 1/(1d) to the t is the
discount factor with d as the discount rate.
Then PVR-C Better yet is the todaro model whcih
looks at the same general model but uses
probabitlites rather than levels.
32- Problems with these models are the lack of
information - Information location and assessment is crucial to
understanding migration
33Migration is a function of
- characteristics of the origin area,
- characteristics of the destination area,
- difficulty of the journey,
- characteristics of the migrant.
34New Economics of Migration
- views migration as a family (i.e., group)
strategy to diversify sources of income, minimize
risks to the household, and overcome barriers to
credit and capital. - International migration is a means to compensate
for the absence or failure of certain types of
markets in developing countries, for example crop
insurance markets, futures markets, unemployment
insurance, or capital markets. - Wage differentials are not seen as a necessary
condition for international migration, and
economic development in areas of origin or
equalization of wage differentials will not
necessarily reduce pressures for migration. - Governments influence migration through their
policies toward insurance, capital, and futures
markets, and through income distribution policies
that affect the relative deprivation of certain
groups and thereby their propensity to migrate
35Dual labor market theory
- demand for low-level workers in more developed
economies is the critical factor shaping
international migration - To avoid the structural inflation that would
result from raising entry wages of native
workers, and to maintain labor as a variable
factor of production, employers seek low-wage
migrant workers.
36Dual labor market theory
- International migration is demand-based and
initiated by recruitment policies of employers or
governments in destination areas. - Wage differentials between origin and destination
areas are neither necessary nor sufficient
conditions for migration. - The options for government policy intervention to
affect migration are limited__short of major
changes in economic organization in destination
areas.
37World systems theory
- Focuses not on labor markets in national
economies, but on the structure of the world
market -- notably the "penetration of capitalist
economic relations into peripheral, noncapitalist
societies," which takes place through the
concerted actions of neocolonial governments,
multinational firms, and national elites.
38- International migration is generated as land, raw
materials, and labor in areas of origin are drawn
into the world market economy and traditional
systems are disrupted. - The transport, communications, cultural and
ideological links that accompany globalization
further facilitate international migration. In
this view, international migration is affected
less by wage or employment differentials between
countries than by policies toward overseas
investments and toward the international flow of
capital and goods.
39Network theory
- migrant networks serve to reduce the costs and
risks of international migration and thus to
increase the likelihood of movement. - The development of such networks are often
facilitated by government policies toward family
reunification and, once started, migrant networks
can make international flows relatively
insensitive to policy interventions.
40Institutional theory
- once international migration has begun, private
and voluntary organizations develop to support
and sustain the movement of migrants. - These include a variety of legal and illegal
entities that provide transport, labor
contracting, housing, legal and other services,
many of which have proven difficult for
governments to regulate.
41Cumulative causation theory
- holds that, by altering the social context of
subsequent migration decisions, the establishment
of international migration streams creates
"feedbacks" that make additional movements more
likely. - Among the factors affected by migration are the
distribution of income and land the organization
of agricultural production the values and
cultural perceptions surrounding migration the
regional distribution of human capital - once a "migration system" has developed, it is
often resistent to government policy intervention
42Other Migration Concepts
- beaten path, counterstream effect (well beaten
path eases travel in both directions), chain-
migration (short moves in one direction forming a
stream - Lowery hypothesis, net out migration positively
related to net inmigration, - Beale hypothesis high gross out migration can be
associated with either high net in or high net
out migration (with Lowery effect dominating in
prosperous an growing areas and the common sense
(net out negatively realted to net in )
dominantig in depressed areas.
43Location Decisions
44Who makes locations decisions when and why?
- The location unit is the entity which is at risk
to being moved, - whereas the location decision unit is the entity
that makes the location decision for the location
unit. - These may be different.
45The primary questions to be answered by the
location unit are
- When should a location decision be made?
- What constitutes a good location?
- What factors are important to a good decision?
46Businesses care about location decisions
- because it costs something to move
- a new location can drastically affect overall
returns for the business.
47In the United States over 250 billion dollars
are spent annually on the construction of new
facilities. It is estimated that depending on the
application 20 to 80 per cent of a facility's
total operating cost is spent on material
handling within facilities. Proper location and
design of facilities can potentially result in
savings of 5 to 50 percent of operating costs.
Apart from the magnitude of costs involved in
facilities, the frequency with which facility
location and layout decisions are made is also
important. It is estimated that the layout of
most facilities is modified approximately every 2
to 5 years. This continual change is required to
keep pace with changes in demand, new product
introductions, product phase-outs, process
changes, improved tooling and technology, new
legislation etc. As such most industrial
engineers and often many other engineers are
involved several times in their career in layout
or location decisions.
48When is a location decision made? Only at
critical junctures of the firms life.
- Birth, when the initial location must be chosen
- When expansion capacity is required
- When a new process or line of output is
introduced - When there has been a major change in
transportation rates
49- When the composition of output changes
- When there is a major change in input
requirements - When there is a shift in markets
- When there is a change in supplier locations
- Or some combination of the above.
- A location decision evaluation assumes something
is wrong with the current location.
50Business Location Factors
- strongest location factor is inertia.
- The supply (including availability, price, and
quality) of local or nontransferable inputs.
Nontransferable or local inputs are those inputs
which are present at a location and which cannot
realistically be moved. Examples Land, climate,
water quality soil composition amenities.
51- The ability to dispose of nontransferable outputs
in the local area. Nontransferable outputs ore
outputs which have to be disposed of locally and
are not realistically transferable elsewhere.
Examples include air and water pollution and
other waste (some is indeed transferable). - Transferable inputs (those input factors which
are relatively easily moved to a given location
from their origin. This includes things like
fuel, materials, and some services and
increasingly, information.
52- Outside demand for transferable outputs. This is
really the availability of the market for the
output of the business and reflects the relevant
transfer costs.
53The Four Classical Traditions in Location Theory
- Land Use Von Thunen/Alonso
- Industrial Location (Process Orientation)
Weber/Smith/Isard/Moses - Central Places/Market Areas- Christaller/Losch
- Spatial Competion - Hotelling
54Location Theory
- Firms and households can be thought of as
optimizers. - Households make decisions to maximize their own
utility. - Firms make decisions to maximize profits, or
minimize costs. - This applies to locational choices as well.
- We have looked at this in regards to regional
location. - We now turn to locational choices within urban
areas.
55The Von Thunen Model
- Von Thunen first discussed the issue of
locational choice in the context of an
agricultural land use model. - We will extend this model to investigate
locational choice of firms and households in
urban areas. - We will get a better understandings of economic
forces operating within urban areas.
56Assumptions
- Assume that farmers produce output, q.
- Productivity per acre is constant at q.
- Markets for inputs and outputs are competitive.
- There are constant nonland inputs per acre, C.
- There are linear transportation costs to the
market. - There is no congestion.
- Cost per lb per mile is constant at t.
- Rents per acre are R.
57Profit Function per acre
- ?pq-C-tqu - R
- Access to the market reduces transport costs.
- Competition for land would increase the price of
land. - This is known as the bid-rent.
- Competition for land would drive out all profits.
58The Von Thunen Model
- Von Thunen first discussed the issue of
locational choice in the context of an
agricultural land use model. - We will extend this model to investigate
locational choice of firms and households in
urban areas. - We will get a better understandings of economic
forces operating within urban areas.
59Assumptions
- Assume that farmers produce output, q.
- Productivity per acre is constant at q.
- Markets for inputs and outputs are competitive.
- There are constant nonland inputs per acre, C.
- There are linear transportation costs to the
market. - There is no congestion.
- Cost per lb per mile is constant at t.
- Rents per acre are R.
60Profit Function per acre
- ?pq-C-tqu - R
- Access to the market reduces transport costs.
- Competition for land would increase the price of
land. - This is known as the bid-rent.
- Competition for land would drive out all profits.
61Bid Rent Function
- Set profits equal to zero, and solve for R.
- ?pq-C-tqu - R0
- Rpq-C - tqu
- Plot this in R-u space
- Intercept pq-C
- Slope dR/du-tq
62Bid-Rent Function
R(u)
Profits are zero
distance to market (u)
63Model of Land Use
u1
u2
A
B
64Generalizing the Model
- Apply to land use patterns in cities.
- Develop for firms
- Develop for households
- Start with simple model, and then add realism.
- Amenities and disamenities
- Fiscal factors
65Standard Urban Location Model
- We will evaluate both firm and household location
models - Firms Choose location within city to maximize
profits. - Generates a land rent function.
- Households Choose location within city to
maximize utility. - Generates a housing price function, and an
underlying land-rent function. - Look at firms first and then households.
66Simplistic City Assumptions
- Look at a turn of the century city
- Characteristics
- Monocentric with central export node.
- Horse-drawn wagons to node for manuf.
- Workers/shoppers commute using streetcars (hub
spoke system). - Agglomeration economies exist for office industry.
67Manufacturers location
- Attraction to city proximity to export node.
- Produce output B with K,L,T, other inputs.
- Prices constant at PB.
- Input and output markets competitive.
- Cost of K,L constant at C.
- Expenditure on land is RT
- Substitution possible.
- Transport prices are constant/ton/mile, t.
- Distance is u
- Look at profit function.
68Bid-Rent for Manufacturing
- Look at the profit function
- ? PBB - C - tBu - RT
- Competition for space drives out all profits.
- ?? PBB - C - tBu - RT0
- Solve for R (PBB - C - tBu)/T
- ?R/ ?u -tB/T
- Since t,B, T are positive, this is negatively
sloped.
69Convexity of Bid-Rent Curve
- Simple Von Thunen model did not allow
substitution, and this lead to constant slope
function. - Here do allow substitutablity. Look at effect on
slope - ?R/ ?u -tB/T
- (slope at a point, so T cannot vary at that
point) - Now treat T usage as dependent on distance.
- ?2R/?u2 ?T/?u(tB)/T2
- Since ?T/?ugt0, then ?2R/?u2gt0
70Zero Profit Bid Rent Curve
Slope of Bid-Rent ?R/ ?u -tB/T Locational
equilibrium ?RT -tB?u
(PBB - C)/T
Bid Rent
u
71Office Firms
- Attraction agglomeration economies.
- Consultations (A) with clients take place in CBD.
- Travel is by foot since they cannot rely on
public transport system (too irregular). - Produce output A with K,L,T, and other inputs.
- Prices constant at PA.
- Input and output markets competitive.
- Cost of K,L constant at C.
- Expenditure on land is RT
- Substitution possible.
- Transport prices per consultation are constant at
mW. - mminutes, Wwage/minute, Distance is u.
- Look at profit function
72Bid-Rent for Office Firms
- Look at the profit function
- ? PAA - C - mWAu - RT
- Competition for space drives out all profits.
- ?? PAA - C - mWAu - RT0
- Solve for R (PAA - C - mWAu)/T
- ?R/ ?u -mAW/T
- Since m,W,A, and T are positive, this is
negatively sloped.
73Zero Profit Bid Rent Curve
Slope of Bid-Rent ?R/ ?u -mWA/T Locational
Equilib (?R)T -mWA?u
(PAA - C)/T
Bid Rent
u
74Which is Steeper?
- Since Wm for office firms, is likely greater
than tu. - On the other hand the ability to substitute away
from land is more difficult for manufacturing.
Thus, T is likely greater in the manuf. sector. - Thus, bid-rent for office is steeper.
75Zero Profit Bid Rent Curve
Land rent function is outer envelope.
Manuf. Bid Rent
Office Bid Rent
u
76Retail firms
- Attraction is because hub of streetcar system
drops them in CBD. - Their markets are related to the density of their
demand, the scale economies associated with
production, and transportation costs. - Central Place theory determines market size.
- Firms carve up the city into submarkets.
77What determines WTP for Land?
- Customers come to the firm to buy goods.
- Profit Function ?G(PG-ACG)
- where Gvolume of goods, Pprice, ACavg. cost.
- If P-AC is constant, then profit max. at max G.
- This is maximized at the center.
- Conclusion
- Willingness to pay for land depends on
accessibility of land to customers, and thus it
increases with access to CBD. - These bid rents vary by firm.
78Zero Profit Bid Rent Curve
Land rent function is outer envelope.
Manuf. Bid Rent
Office and Retail Bid Rent
u
79Land Use Patterns
Office Retail
O
Manuf.
80Residential Location Models
- Households choose locations to maximize utility.
- Household characteristics
- Households choose between Housing (H) and other
goods (X), thus V(X,H) (identical tastes) - Households work in the CBD
- Assume away decentralized employment.
- Income is constant at W.
- Commuting costs per mile are constant at t.
- Look at optimization problem
81Constrained Optimization
- LV(X,H)?(I-PXX-PHH-tu)
- We will look at the First Order Condition with
respect to u - ?L/ ?u -????PH/?uH - t) 0
- What does binding constraint imply?
- Thus, ?PH/?uH - t 0 or ?PH/?u- t/H
- In addition, given substitutability, this is
convex since ?2PH/?u2(t?H/?u)/H2gt0
82Bid Housing Price Function
Slope ?PH/?u -t/H Locational
Equilibium ?PHH -t ?u
Bid Rent
u
83Family of Bid Functions
Utility falls as we move to higher bid
functions. Why? Which is most
relevant? Related to S and D for
labor.
u
84From Bid Housing Price to Housing Price Gradient
- Slope ?PH/?u -t/H
- The housing price gradient is simply the percent
change in housing prices brought about by a unit
change in distance. - Divide the numerator by PH to get
- (?PH/PH)/?u -t/(HPH)
- What does this mean?
85From Bid Housing Price to Bid Rent
- Demand for land by households is derived from the
demand for housing. - Thus, the bid housing price function generates a
bid-rent function. - Book shows this using revenue cost function
- profitP(u)Q - K-R(u)T
- R(u)(P(u)Q - K)/T
- where P(u) is price per square foot of housing,
Qnumber of square feet, Knonland inputs, Tland
inputs.
86Derivation of Bid Rent
K
P(u)Q
u
R
87Rent-Gradient and Housing Price Gradient
- Since the demand for land is derived from the
demand for housing, the gradients are also
related. - (?R/R)/?u1/landshare(?PH/PH)/?u
- Land share Rent exp./Housing exp.
- If land share is say 0.1, which is steeper?
- Land Rent gradient is steeper.
88Land Use Patterns in the Monocentric Model
Office Retail
O
Manuf.
Households
Why are households at most distant location?
89Does SUM say anything about Population Density?
- Density falls as consumption of housing
increases. - H decreases as u decreases for two reasons.
- Builders substitute away from land as R
increases. - Households substitute away from housing as PH
increases.
90Summary
- SUM predicts
- Downward sloping, and convex rent gradient.
- Downward sloping, and convex housing price
gradient. - Steeper rent gradient than housing price
gradient. - Declining density.
- Accessibility matters to households.
- Rings of activity in Monocentric city
- Lets look at some empirical evidence
91Rent Gradient Evidence
- There is not a lot of evidence here since land
rent is not typically observed. That is, there
are few transactions on undeveloped land. - Mills shows that rent gradients are downward
sloping, and have been falling over time. - Chicago, 1928, rents fall about 20/mi.
- Chicago, 1960, rents fall about 11.5/mi.
92Housing Price Gradient
- Evidence from Jerry Jackson
- Some support here.
- Housing prices fall by approximately 2.5
per/mile. - More later!
93Land Rent vs. Housing Price Gradient
- If land rent share is 0.1 to 0.2, then we get the
following prediction on rent gradient - (?R/R)/?u1/LS(?PH/PH)/?u
- LS0.1 implies (?R/R)/?u1/0.12.525/mi.
- LS0.2 implies (?R/R)/?u1/0.22.512.5/mi.
- Thus, some support here.
94Declining Population Density
- There is substantial evidence here.
- McDonald(1989, Journal of Urban Economics) has a
lengthy review article on this evidence. - Next time, I will briefly review this article
95Does Accessibility Matter?
- Jackson article suggest that the answer is yes.
- However, Bruce Hamilton published an influential
article in 1982 (JPE) that cast doubt on the
predictability of the SUM. - Measured wasteful commuting, by looking at pop.
and employment density functions for cities. - He found that there was 8 times more commuting
taking place than could be explained by SUM.
96Also Add other Realism
- Add in amenities/disamenities
- Add in fiscal factors
97Weber/Losch/Isard/Smith
- Theories of plant location
98Theories of Plant Location
- Median Location Principle
- Linear Market Competition
- Webers Theory of Location
- Loschs Economic of Location
- Isards Space Economy
- Smiths Spatial Margins
99Webers Theory of Location
- Alfred Weber, German, 1909
- General theory applicable to any economic,
political or cultural system. - Minimum cost location
- Three factors
- Transport costs
- Labor costs
- Agglomeration
100Webers Theory of Location
- Assumptions
- Isotropic plain uniform topography, climate,
technology, and economic system. - One finished product with one market
- Fixed location of raw materials and market site
- Labor is fixed, but available in unlimited
quantities at production site - Transport costs are a function of weight and
distance
101Webers Theory of Location
- Definitions
- Ubiquities materials available everywhere at the
same cost - Localized materials available at specific
locations only - Pure materials no weight loss during
manufacturing - Weight-losing materials portion of product is
being used, resulting in a waste component
102Webers Theory of Location
- Transport costs
- Single market and single source
- Ubiquitous material results in location at the
market - Pure material allows processing at market,
source, or an intermediate location - Weight-losing material will be processed at the
source to avoid transporting waste material
103Webers Theory of Location
- Transport costs
- One market and two sources
- Equal distance and shipping costs dictates a
market location - Two weight-losing materials results in an
intermediate location
104Webers Theory of Location
- Webers theory results in 3 generalizations
- Using pure materials in the production process
will always dictate a market location - Weight-loss materials usage will pull the plant
closer to the sources - Intermediate location chosen most often
- No handling costs at terminal
105Webers Theory of Location
- Labor Costs
- Location chosen always has least combined costs
- A location my have higher transport costs, but
more inexpensive labor - Isotims lines of equal transport cost
- Isodapane line of total transport costs (sum of
isotims)
106(No Transcript)
107Webers Theory of Location
- Agglomeration
- Weber recognized that clustering will result in a
per unit savings - Example
108Webers Theory of Location
- General theory
- No geographic variation in market demand
- No terminal costs
- Transport costs are becoming less of a factor
- Labor is mobile and does not exist in unlimited
quantities - Plants often produce a variety of outputs for
many markets
109Review
- What is the median location principle? Draw it!
- What is the concept of linear competition? Draw
it! - What is Webers theory of location?
- What are the three factors?
- What are the assumptions?
- Expand on the three factors!
- Drawbacks of the theory?
110Isards Space Economy
- General theory of location by integrating von
Thunen, Weber and Losch - Based on substitution principle
- The substitution of one thing for another
- Ex capital can be substituted for labor
- Ex substitution of transport costs
111Location T to M1 2 miles M2 7 miles
Location S to M1 4 miles M2 5 miles
If we were to plot these as coordinates, this is
the result
Movement along the line will demonstrate the
substitution of distances (or more appropriately,
transport costs
112Smiths Spatial Margins
- Simplified real world conditions
- Profit motive
- Processing costs vary
- Most profitable location is where total revenues
exceed total costs by the greatest amount
113Total cost line or space-cost curve
Total revenue
Spatial margins to profitability
A Weber, revenues are equal everywhere B Losch,
variable revenue, but equal cost C Integration
of theories
114Webbers Uncertainty Effect
- All firms share in uncertainty
- More realistic
- Greater uncertainties results lower investment of
capital - Uncertainty increases with greater separation
from the market - Satisficing rather than optimizing
115Manufacturing Regional Patterns and Problems
- Patterns
- Evenly spaced or random
- Evenly distributed or linear
- Maybe random
- How do we address these patterns and apply logic
to their spatial arrangement?
116Importance of Manufacturing
- Manufacturing activities are being displaced by
service sector activities and high tech industry - Why?
- Financial and consulting services
- Increases in consumer income
- Increases in public sector employment
- Research and development
- Advertising and promotion
- Can this sustain economic growth?
117High Tech Industry
- Research and Development
- Are these services replacing manufacturing or are
they complimentary? - Locate near metropolitan regions due to large
technical labor force - What happens if there is a shift in resources
dedicated to manufacturing? - Regional economic growth will decline
- Results in less expenditures for research and
development - Loss of future opportunities
118Regional Patterns and Processes
- Cycle Theory
- Industrial regions progress through a sequence of
stages over time - Regions do not change at a consistent rate
- Regions do not follow the sequence
- Regional Cycle Theory
- Youth
- Maturity
- Old Age
119- Regional Cycle Theory
- Youth
- Experimentation and rapid growth
- High levels of investment
- Recognition of cost-saving locations
- New technology spurs more growth
- Competitive advantage (low production cost, large
geographic market) - Maturity
- Dominance exerted over other regions
- Competition increases among regions
- Branch plants located in other markets
- Small loss of employees to branch plants
- Maintain locational cost advantage
- Old Age
- Market shifts
- Cheaper raw materials
- Labor cheaper elsewhere
- Taxes, competitive land uses
- Employees leave for higher paying jobs
120- Regional Examples
- New England
- Grew through the industrial revolution
- Can anyone think of any smaller, local examples?
121Manufacturing w/i the Urban System
- Large cities are most attractive
- Large markets
- Better access to surrounding regions and markets
- Access to national market
- Transportation connections (interstate, railway,
air links) - Large pools of skilled labor
- Convenient business services (warehousing,
communication links)
122Manufacturing w/i the Urban System
- Smaller cities are advantageous
- Lower cost of labor
- Manufacturing will be focused on processing raw
materials - Remember weight losing materials?
- Perishable food items
- Reflects the type of economy
- Mining, agricultural, forestry
123Diffusion of Manufacturing
- Rate and direction of change
- Diffusions occurs from a point or points
- Spreads the fastest where there are no barriers
- Physical
- Cultural
- Political
124Manufacturing Regions
- American Manufacturing Belt / Rustbelt
- New York City leading in manufacturing
- Chicago second
- Regional concentrations
- New England District
- New York and the Middle Atlantic
- Central New York and Mohawk Valley
- Pittsburgh-Cleveland-Lake Erie
- Western Great Lakes
- St. Lawrence Valley and Ontario District
125Manufacturing Regions
- New England District
- Oldest of the regions in the Northeast
- Clothing and textile industry originally
- Today its focus is electronic products,
electrical machinery and fabricated metal - Skilled labor pool from prestigious universities
126Manufacturing Regions
- New York and Middle Atlantic
- Centered on NYC
- Access to Intl. ports
- Fortune 500 companies
- International and national trade opportunities
- Financial, communications, and media
- Apparel, iron and steel, chemicals, machinery
- Publishing industry
127Manufacturing Regions
- Central NY and Mohawk Valley
- Electrical machinery, chemicals, optical
equipment - Erie Canal and Hudson River
- Access to Atlantic and Great Lakes
- Niagara hydro-electric plant
128Manufacturing Regions
- Pittsburgh-Cleveland-Lake Erie
- Oldest steel producing region in North America
- Centered on Western Pennsylvania and Eastern Ohio
- Electrical equipment, machinery, machine tools
- St. Lawrence Valley and Ontario
- Most populated
- Abundance of skilled labor
- Iron and steel, pulp and paper, processed food
129Manufacturing Regions
- Western Great Lakes
- Detroit automobile manufacturing
- Chicago railcars, tractors, implements, food
processing - Milwaukee iron and steel, fabricated metals,
machinery, printing - Popular distribution point because of transport
connections
130Manufacturing Regions
- Other regions in the US
- Gulf Coast
- Texas to Florida panhandle
- Chemicals, petroleum industry
- Southeastern
- Textiles, aluminum, lumber, transportation
equipment - West Coast
- Aerospace and aircraft industry
- Electrical components, ships, machinery
- Silicon Valley
- Pacific Northwest
- Aircraft, lumber, processed foods
131Manufacturing Regions
- Growth in population and economies occurs in the
Sunbelt after WWII - Sunbelt southern and western US
- Climate
- Market shifts
- Labor cost locations
- Tax advantages/breaks
- California and Florida experience population
booms - Development of urban fringe
- 1977 to 1982, 13 to 20 increase in
manufacturing in many western states - Regardless, NYC increased of jobs, why?
132 133Median Location Principle
- Assumptions
- Production costs do not vary
- Delivery costs may vary
- Seek a location with minimal delivery costs
- Becomes location of maximum profit
- Example
Two possible median locations
134Linear Market Competition
- Assumptions
- Two manufacturers
- Same production costs
- Uniform demand
- Example
135 Infrastructures
Users
Modes
Transportation
Spatial imprint
Urban Form
136Introduction and Motivation
- Several examples of strategic interaction are
used to set the stage. - Strategic situations are ubiquitous.
- Individual interests are rarely either completely
identical or perfectly opposed. - Readings Dutta, chapter 1. McMillan, chapters
1, 2 3.
137Game Theory Background
- In war the will is directed at an animate object
that reacts. --Karl von Clausewitz - Environment includes other individuals and there
is uncertainty about how they will act (or
react). - We can resolve some of this uncertainty if we
assume that people act in a manner which is
consistent with the achievement of their own
goals.
138Game Theory -- Definitions
- Study of rational behavior in situations
involving interdependence. (McMillan) - rational - actions are consistent with goals not
consistently making the same mistake. - Interdependence - any player is affected by what
others do actions must depend upon prediction of
others responses. - A formal way to analyze interaction among a group
of rational agents who behave strategically.
(Dutta) - Strategic behavior - Each player accounts for
interdependence
139Interdependence
- In order to decide what to do, you must determine
how others are going to act (or react). - This requires a knowledge of
- others aims (where they believe their interests
lie), and - the options available to them.
- What action will some player choose?
- Complicated by the fact that the best action will
typically depend upon what others do. - How is one to guess what others choices will be?
140Why do economists care?
- The typical problems of economic behavior are
strictly identical with the mathematical notions
of suitable games of strategy. Von Neumann
Morgenstern - Examples
- Buyer and seller negotiating over a price
- Employer and employee interaction (negotiation,
creating incentives) - Firm and its competitors
- Firm and potential competitors
- Auctioneer and bidders
- (and the list goes on)
141Applications outside Economics
- Presidential candidates
- Congress and the President
- Opposing generals at War
- King Lear and his daughters (strategic bequests)
- Contests in the animal kingdom
- Strategic voting
- and the list goes on
142Examples of strategic situations
- Several examples are used to set the stage. These
are used to introduce important themes for the
semester. I expect you to be familiar with the
details of each example, as well as with the
strategic principles they illustrate. - Two firms competing over sales
- Time and Newsweek must decide upon the cover
story to run in some given week. - The big stories of the week are a presidential
scandal (labeled M) and a proposal to deploy US
forces in the Balkans (labeled K).
143Example (simultaneous move)
- Time and Newsweek (continued)
- Each magazines sales depend upon both cover
stories. - When deciding on a cover, neither knows which
story the other magazine will choose to run. - Heres a convenient way to organize the sales
information
144Example (simultaneous moves)
- This is called a simultaneous move game (even
though choices need not be made at the same
instant in time!) - What stories will the two magazines choose to
run? - What would you choose (as the editor of Time)?
- How do your answers change if the sales figures
are as follows
145Example (sequential moves)
- Interaction between a firm and a potential
competitor. - F is a monopoly and G is a potential entrant.(F
is the only barber in Seville, G is thinking of
getting into the business) . - G gets to move first and must decide whether to
stay out (O) or to enter (E) the market. If he
chooses to enter, then F gets to move and his
choices are to either start a price war (W) or to
accommodate (A) entry. - We will call this a game with sequential moves.
146Example - continued
- This information (including the order of moves)
can be conveniently organized using a
tree - What should G do? What is the outcome likely to
be?(Hint G can try and predict what F will do
in case he were to enter.)
147Example (continued)
- The example of the barbers also raises the
question of threats and their credibility F
would like to persuade G to stay out of the
market. In the event that G enters, he threatens
to shave his patrons for free. - Should (will) G believe this?
- What can F do to make such a threat likely to be
credible?
148Prisoners Dilemma
- Story is familiar (payoffs are prison
terms) - Individually best strategies lead to an outcome
that is inefficient (there are feasible outcomes
which are jointly preferred). - Not a game of pure conflict (opportunities for
cooperation)
149Prisoners dilemma (continued)
- Applications
- Arms Control Two countries, each likes best the
situation where they have a huge arsenal while
their adversary does not. Disarming while the
other keeps its weapons is the worst outcome.
When both are armed, neither has a tactical
superiority over the other and they jointly
prefer the outcome where neither has a stockpile
of weapons. - Stability of cartels
- How can small armies of tyrannical dictators
control large populations? Coordinated action
would have a good chance of success. Difficulties
in obtaining outcomes that involve coordination. - Several other examples (see Question 4 of
Homework 1)
150Negotiation with a deadline
- The case of Mortimer and Hotspur (in the way of
a bargain, mark you me, Ill cavil on the ninth
part of a hair) McMillan, p.16 - Mortimer and Hotspur are to divide 100 between
themselves. Each of the bargainers knows that the
game has the following structure - Stage 1 Mortimer proposes how much of the 100
he gets. Then either Hotspur accepts it, in which
case the game ends and Hotspur receives the
remainder of the 100 or Hotspur rejects it, in
which case the game continues. - Stage 2 The sum to be divided has now shrunk to
90. Hotspur makes a proposal for his share of
the 90. Then Mortimer either accepts it and gets
the remainder or rejects it, in which case each
receives nothing and the game ends. - What will Mortimer demand at the first stage?
151Mortimer and Hotspur (continued)
- Analysis - McMillan, p. 17. (In what ways is this
game similar to the example of the two barbers
above?) - Suppose we modify the game so that it ends after
stage 1 (only, if Hotspur rejects the offer the
game ends with neither player receiving
anything). What happens now? - The value of a take it or leave it offer.
- Credibility issue that you will indeed walk away
from any counteroffer. - Achieving commitment.
- Pride, pique, and irrationality cannot be ignored
152Location, Location,
- Our cities become uneconomically large and
business districts within them are too
concentrated. Methodist and Presbyterian churches
are too alike cider is too homogeneous. --
Harold Hotelling (1929) - presidential candidates take similar centrist
positions, television networks target their
programs at bland middle of the road tastes, - A version of the location game is in McMillan, p.
15 - Two beer vendors operate on a beach. They are
required to charge the same price, but they can