Creating Wealth

M. Polése
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Abstract

This chapter returns to the question at the heart of economics as a social science since Adam Smith and his seminal work on the origins of wealth. Why are some nations rich and others poor? The focus here is on the role of cities, on “agglomeration” in the jargon of economics. We find little evidence in support of Jane Jacobs’s thesis that agglomeration is sufficient to independently trigger economic growth. After explaining the concept of “agglomeration economies,” the gains from spatial concentration, various obstacles to their realization are examined: deficient urban transport; insecurity; arbitrary governance; informality; and so on. Their full realization requires solid institutions, which all too often are lacking. Starting with the origins of the Industrial Revolution, we conclude that the impact of urbanization (greater agglomeration) is essentially allocational, shifting labor to more productive endeavors. The roots of technological innovation, which is at the heart of economic progress, run much deeper, taking us back to national cultures and institutions.
创造财富
本章将回到自亚当•斯密及其关于财富起源的开创性著作以来,作为一门社会科学的经济学的核心问题。为什么有的国家富有,有的国家贫穷?这里的重点是城市的作用,用经济学术语来说就是“集聚”。我们发现很少有证据支持简·雅各布斯关于集聚足以独立触发经济增长的理论。在解释了“集聚经济”的概念后,分析了空间集聚带来的收益及其实现的各种障碍:城市交通不足;不安全感;任意的治理;不拘礼节的;等等......充分实现这些目标需要坚实的机构,而这往往是缺乏的。从工业革命的起源开始,我们得出结论,城市化(更大的集聚)的影响本质上是配置的,将劳动力转移到更有生产力的活动中。技术创新是经济进步的核心,其根源要深得多,它把我们带回到国家文化和制度上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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