The Spatial Distribution of Population in Spain: An Anomaly in European Perspective

Eduardo Gutiérrez, Enrique Moral-Benito, Daniel Oto-Peralías, Roberto Ramos
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引用次数: 60

Abstract

We exploit the GEOSTAT 2011 population grid to document that Spain presents the lowest density of settlements among European countries. Only a small fraction of the Spanish territory is inhabited, particularly in its southern half, which goes hand in hand with a high degree of population concentration. We uncover through standard regression analysis and spatial regression discontinuity that this anomaly cannot be accounted for by adverse geographic and climatic conditions. The second part of the paper takes a historical perspective on Spain's settlement patterns by showing that the spatial distribution of the population has been very persistent in the last two centuries, and that the abnormally low density of settlements with respect to European neighbors was already visible in the 19th century, which indicates that this phenomenon has not emerged recently as a consequence of the transformations associated with industrialization and tertiarization. Using data on ancient sites, we find that Spain did not feature scarcity of settlements in comparison to other countries in pre-medieval times, suggesting that its current anomalous settlement pattern has not always existed and is therefore not intrinsic to its geography.
西班牙人口的空间分布:欧洲视角下的异常现象
我们利用GEOSTAT 2011人口网格来证明西班牙是欧洲国家中定居点密度最低的国家。西班牙只有一小部分领土有人居住,特别是在南半部,这与人口高度集中密切相关。我们通过标准回归分析和空间回归不连续发现,这种异常不能由不利的地理和气候条件来解释。论文的第二部分从历史的角度分析了西班牙的定居模式,表明在过去的两个世纪里,西班牙人口的空间分布一直非常持久,而与欧洲邻国相比,西班牙的定居密度异常低,这在19世纪就已经很明显了,这表明这种现象并不是最近出现的,而是与工业化和三化相关的转变的结果。利用古代遗址的数据,我们发现,与中世纪前的其他国家相比,西班牙的定居点并不稀缺,这表明其目前的异常定居点模式并非一直存在,因此不是其地理固有的。
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