高效的都市资源配置

R. Arnott
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的30年里,卡尔加里的人口翻了一番,从1985年的640,645人增加到2015年的1,230,915人。在此期间,伦敦换了五位市长,举办了冬季奥运会,并将c线列车的站台从25个增加到45个。卡尔加里的大都市区也在发展,艾尔德里、切斯特米尔、奥克托克和科克伦已经发展成为成熟的城市,城市间的通勤者已经成熟。*随着90年代中期省立法的变化,乡村洛基维尤县和山麓市辖区现在是住宅、商业和工业发展的真正竞争对手,而这些在过去被认为是城市。在这个大都市系统中,人们居住的地方,他们的家庭结构和工作地点决定了他们日常生活所需的服务,并直接影响城市和更广泛地区的空间特征。总之,大都市卡尔加里越来越复杂。卡尔加里和更广泛的大都市区将继续增长,即使目前的经济放缓。卡尔加里内部、大都市区各市之间的摩擦以及其他地方当局(如学校委员会和艾伯塔省卫生服务部门)的优先事项将继续影响当地政治家的议程及其满足居民需求的能力。资源——无论是硬基础设施、经济适用房、教室还是医院病床——如何在空间上分配,以及这些资源如何获得资金,直接影响到这些关系。这篇技术论文提供了我作为城市经济学家对大都市系统内资源有效配置的观点,并酌情参考卡尔加里,并作为先前发布的“卡尔加里空间结构反思:城市经济学家对卡尔加里市政规划的批评”的姊妹篇。希望本文所讨论的概念能有效地扩展和补充前一篇论文的讨论。本文所采用的城市经济视角本身与公共经济学的视角并不矛盾,但它更多地关注空间、城市交通和土地利用政策,而较少关注税收政策和政府间财政安排。我将探讨都市系统中效率低下的以下来源:1)本地公共产品,2)外部性,以及3)规模经济,首先简要介绍经典市场失灵和次优政策的背景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Efficient Metropolitan Resource Allocation
Over the past 30 years Calgary has doubled in size, from a population of 640,645 in 1985 to 1,230,915 in 2015. During that time the City has had five different mayors, hosted the Winter Olympics, and expanded the C-Train from 25 platforms to 45. Calgary’s Metropolitan Area has grown too, with Airdrie, Chestermere, Okotoks and Cochrane growing into full-fledged cities, ripe with inter-urban commuters.* And with changes to provincial legislation in the mid-’90s, rural Rocky View County and the Municipal District of Foothills are now real competitors for residential, commercial and industrial development that in the past would have been considered urban. In this metropolitan system, where people live, their household structure, and their place of work informs the services they need to conduct their daily lives, and directly impacts the spatial character of the City and the broader region. In sum, Metropolitan Calgary is increasingly complex. Calgary and the broader metropolitan area will continue to grow, even with the current economic slowdown. Frictions within Calgary, between the various municipalities in the metropolitan area, and the priorities of other local authorities (such as the School Boards and Alberta Health Services) will continue to impact the agendas of local politicians and their ability to answer to the needs of their residents. How resources – whether it is hard infrastructure, affordable housing, classrooms, or hospital beds – are allocated over space and how these resources are funded, directly impacts these relationships. This technical paper provides my perspective as an urban economist on the efficient allocation of resources within a metropolitan system in general, with reference to Calgary where appropriate, and serves as a companion to the previously released “Reflections on Calgary’s Spatial Structure: An Urban Economists Critique of Municipal Planning in Calgary.” It is hoped that the concepts reviewed herein effectively expand upon and supplement the discussion in the former paper. The urban economic perspective adopted in this paper is itself not inconsistent with the public economics perspective but it pays more attention to space, and metropolitan transportation and land use policy, and less to tax policy and intergovernmental fiscal arrangements. I will explore the following sources of inefficiency within a metropolitan system: 1) local public goods, 2) externalities, and 3) economies of scale, starting with a short background on classic market failure and second-best policy.
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