Title: Land Use and the Monocentric City
1Land Use and the Monocentric City
2The Monocentric City
- Typical city of the 19th Century. It has a heavy
concentration of employment in the central core
area - Key feature is a heavy concentration of
employment in the central core area. - Why study the Monocentric City
- Historical Perspective
- Small and Medium are Monocentric cities
- Understand the transition to the modern city
- Many lessons of MC can be expanded to modern
cities
3Characteristics of the Monocentric City
- Intercity Transportation? Central Export Node. A
port, or railway station is located at the center
of the city. From there the city firms send their
production of good x to other cities (Train). - Intra-City Transportation. Manufacturing firms
transport their output a distance u from the
plant to the export node, at a cost of per mile
(Horse-drawn wagons). - Workers Commuting Costs. Workers live outside the
central district and commute to their place of
work (street car). - Agglomeration Economies. Office industry relies
on face-to-face interactions.
4The Bid-Rent Function
- The Bid-Rent Function The Bid-Rent is the
hypothetical price that the firm or household
would pay for a piece of land for a given level
of profits or utility. The difference between
Bid-Rent Function and Land Rent is that Land-Rent
is derived from the market price and it is
observed, while Bid-Rent function is not observed.
5Strategy of todays class
- Calculate the bid-rent function of
- Manufacturing Firms (Produce a good x)
- Office Firms (Produces F consultations)
- They gather, process and distribute information.
- They rely on face to face contact to provide
their services. - Households (Commute to work in central city)
- Each of these agents will locate where thay are
willing to pay the highest rent.
6The Bid Rent Function of Manufacturing Firms
- Fixed Factors of Production. Each firm uses one
acre of land and dollars of non-land inputs, to
produce x units of output per time period. - Output price Px is fixed.
- Competitive Markets, No entry barriers and
economic profits are zero. - Transportation costs per unit of output from
plant to export node (distance u) are per mile.
7The Bid Rent Function of Manufacturing Firms
(Cont)
- Firms Problem is
- and because of the leftover principle, the bid
rent function becomes
Slope txX
Distance from Center u
8Input Substitution
- Remove FFP assumption
- For higher land prices firms will substitute away
from land and use other inputs to produce a fixed
level of output. And the bid rent function
becomes
Slope txX/Tx(u)
Distance from Center u
9The Bid-Rent Function of Office Firms
- The office is located u miles from the city
center. Each firm produces F units of service or
consultations per month. - Employees travel u miles from the office to the
city center to consult with clients in tf
minutes. The worker receives a wage W per
minute. So the total employee travel cost is
tfWFu . - The output price is fixed at Pf.
- Markets are competitive with free entry and exit
of firms. - There is factor substitution.
10The Bid-Rent Function of Office Firms (Cont)
- The firms profit function becomes
- And the profit bid function becomes
Slope tfFW/Tf(u)
Slope txX/Tx(u)
Distance from Center u
11The Bid-Rent Function of Office Firms (Cont)
Slope tfFW/Tf(u)
- The land will be rented to the highest bidder,
and it will be the office firm as long as the
cost of workers transportation of the marginal
office firm is greater than the cost of
manufactured goods transportation of the marginal
manufacturing firm
Slope txX/Tx(u)
Distance from Center u
Office
Manufacturing
12Residential Land Use
- Here the strategy consists of two steps first to
find the Housing-Price Function (Compensated
Demand for Housing Curve, household side), and
second to find the Residential Bid-Rent (The
Housing Firm side). - a) One member of household commutes to CBD.
- b) Non-Commuting travel is
insignificant. - c) Public services and taxes are the same in
all locations. - d) Air quality is the same at all locations.
- e) All households have the same income and tastes
for housing. - f) There is a monetary cost to commuting, but not
a time cost. The opportunity cost of commuting in
time is zero.
13Group Discussion (10 minutes)
- Depict graphically the effects of the following
changes on the division of CDB land between
office firms and manufacturers - Unit freight cost decreases
- Price of office output increases
- Opportunity cost of executive travel decreases
-
14Step 1 Household Side
- The Housing Price Function indicates how much a
household is willing to pay per square foot in
different locations in the city, keeping utility
constant. - Linear Housing-Price Function (No consumer
substitution) Here the consumption of housing
(H) is fixed. The household will be indifferent
as long as -
- The change in commuting costs due to a change on
distance equals the change in rent paid. Utility
is constant.
Housing Price Function
Slope th/H
u
15Household Side Convex Linear-Housing Price
Function
- Now housing consumption depends on the price of
housing, Consumers obey the law of demand. The
equilibrium equation can thus be
rewritten as -
- And the slope of the housing-price function
becomes -
- Multiply by and we get the Housing Price
Gradient
16Residential Bid-Rent Function (Fixed Factors)
- Indicates how much producers are willing to pay
for land at different locations in the city. - Because of the leftover principle producers will
be willing to pay a rent that equals the
difference between their revenue and their costs -
- And the Residential Bid-Rent Function equals
-
- Since Ph is a convex function of u, then the
Residential Bid-Rent Function will also be
convex.
17Residential Bid Function (Factor Substitution)
- With factor substitution, as land price falls,
housing firms will use more land. The bid rent
function becomes even more convex -
- Where Th(u) is the size of land and
- Note that the convexity of the housing-price
function (consumer substitution) and the bid-rent
function (factor substitution) makes urban
density much greater than suburban density.
18The Monocentric City in Diagram
Office bid rent function
Manufacturing bid-rent function
Residential Bid Rent Function
u
Office District
Manufacturing District
Residential District
19Relaxing the Assumptions
- No Time Cost of Commuting
- Non-Commuting Travel
- Two Earner Households
20Group Discussion
- Depict graphically how would the following affect
the Housing-Price function - The quality of air is different in different
parts of the Monocentric city. - The work week is shorten from 5 days to 4 days.
- The central node is a cluster for cultural and
recreational activities.
21Income Segregation
Income Elasticity Land
Income Elasticity Commuting
- Monocentric model predicts that households choose
their residential location as a trade-off between
commuting costs and land costs. - Can this model explain why do poor households
locate in the CBD area, while the rich on
suburban locations? - Other explanations?
gt
MCP
MBP
MCR
MBR
u
22Interaction Between Urban and Labor Markets
- Assume Constant Population Density
- Assume a Rectangular City
Labor Supply
Business Bid-Rent Function
w
Residential Bid-Rent Function
Labor Demand
u
d1
d2
N
N
23Introduction of a Streetcar System (1)
- Residential Bid-Rent Function expands into
previous agricultural area.
SL
SL
DL
u
d1
d2
d2
N
24Introduction of the Streetcar System (2)
- The increase of labor supply will lower wages
- Shift residential bid rent function downward
- Shift the business bid rent function upward
d1
d2
u
u
d1
d2
25Paradise Lost and Revisited (JUE 1981)
- Goal of the paper Coincide historical data with
the Monocentric City Model using changes in
transportation technology (TT). - Three stages of development of a city
- Paradise (Common TT, slow)
- Paradise Lost (Rich?Fast TT, Poor?Slow TT)
- Paradise Regained (Common TT, fast)
26Paradise Lost and Revisited (JUE 1981) (2)
- What are the main assumptions
- Main identification strategy
- Change of transportation technology
- Walk to omnibus
- Omnibus to Commuter Railroad
- Commuter Railroad to car
27Paradise Lost and Revisited (JUE 1981) (3)
- Further discussion
- How do transportation policy affects residential
segregation - What type of policies would generate a mixed
residential outcome? What type of policies will - generate further segregation?
- What role does pollution, congestion and the
free rider problem have on gentrification and
residential segregation?