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GLOBAL CITY-REGIONS
Allen J. Scott, John Agnew, Edward W. Soja, and Michael Storper
Introduction
There are now more than 300 city-regions around the world
with populations greater than one million. At least twenty
city-regions have populations in excess of ten million. They
range from familiar metropolitan agglomerations dominated
by a strongly-developed core such as the London region or
Mexico City, to more polycentric geographic units as in the
cases of the urban networks of the Randstad or Emilia-Romagna.
Everywhere, these city-regions are expanding vigorously, and
they present many deep challenges to researchers and policy
makers as we enter the 21st century. The processes of world-wide
economic integration and accelerated urban growth make traditional
planning and policy strategies in these regions increasingly
problematical while more fitting approaches remain in a largely
experimental stage. New ways of thinking about these processes
and new ways of acting to harness their benefits and to control
their negative effects are urgently needed.
The
concept of global city-regions can be traced back to the "world
cities" idea of Hall (1966) and Friedmann and Wolff (1982),
and to the "global cities" idea of Sassen (1991). We build
here on these pioneering efforts, but in a way that tries
to extend the meaning of the concept in economic, political
and territorial terms, and above all by an effort to show
how city-regions increasingly function as essential spatial
nodes of the global economy and as distinctive political actors
on the world stage. In fact, rather than being dissolved away
as social and geographic objects by processes of globalization,
city-regions are becoming increasingly central to modern life,
and all the more so because globalization (in combination
with various technological shifts) has reactivated their significance
as bases of all forms of productive activity, no matter whether
in manufacturing or services, in high-technology or low-technology
sectors. As these changes have begun to run their course,
it has become increasingly apparent that that city in the
narrow sense is less an appropriate or viable unit of local
social organization than city-regions or regional networks
of cities. One tangible expression of this idea can be observed
in the forms of consolidation that are beginning to occur
as adjacent units of local political organization (provinces,
Länder, counties, metropolitan areas, municipalities, départements,
and so on) search for region-wide coalitions as a means of
dealing with the threats and the opportunities of globalization.
In this process, we argue, global city-regions have emerged
of late years as a new and critically important kind of geographic
and institutional phenomenon on the world stage.
In what follows, we attempt to bring these remarks into closer
conceptual focus. Our discussion is driven by five main questions,
i.e.,
1.
Why are global city-regions growing rapidly precisely at a
moment in history when some analysts are claiming that the
end of geography is in sight, and that the world is turning
into a placeless space of flows?
2.
How have forms of economic and social organization in city-regions
responded to globalization, and what new problems have been
created as a consequence?
3. What main governance tasks do global city-regions face
as they seek to preserve and enhance their wealth and well-being?
4.
Is it possible for the less economically advanced parts of
the world to harness the potential benefits of global city-region
development to their own advantage, and what are the main
drawbacks of such development for them?
5.
How can we define the public interest in culturally heterogeneous
global city-regions? In particular, how are traditional notions
of democracy and citizenship being challenged by the emergence
of global city-regions and in what ways can they be made more
effective in this new context?
Cutting
across all of these questions are the competing claims of
the two main political ideologies that seem most clearly poised
to assume prominent roles in modern capitalist societies in
the decades immediately ahead, namely, a currently dominant
neoliberalism, and -- most evident today in certain parts
of the European Union -- a new social democratic (or social
market) perspective. These two ideologies offer in theory
and practice quite contrasting visions of the future of global
city-regions.
The
New Regionalism in Global Context
In the immediate post-War decades almost all of the major
capitalist countries were characterized by strong central
governments and tightly bordered national economies. These
countries formed a political bloc within the framework of
a Pax Americana, itself underpinned by a network of international
arrangements (the Bretton Woods system, the World Bank, the
IMF, GATT) through which they sought to regulate their economic
relations. Although international trade and investment flows
expanded rapidly in the post-war period, they scarcely disrupted
the ability of nation-states to implement domestic economic
policies. One consequence of this situation was that each
country had its own peculiar national institutional structure
that in greater or lesser degree shaped social and demographic
processes and sustained a distinctive national urban system.
Today,
globalization has brought about significant transformations
of this older order of things. There are many institutional
experiments now under way that are leading in the direction
of a new social and political organization of space. This
new organization consists above all of a hierarchy of interpenetrating
territorial scales of economic activity and governance relations,
ranging from the global to the local, and in which the emerging
system of global city-regions figures prominently. Four main
points need to be made about this hierarchy.
1.
Huge and ever-increasing amounts of economic activity (input-output
chains, labor migrations, trade, foreign direct investment,
international business operations, monetary flows, and so
on) now occur in extensive cross-national networks. As globalization
moves forward, it creates conflicts and predicaments that
in turn activate a variety of political responses and institution-building
efforts in regard to these networks. Examples include the
major international financial and business arrangements that
are already in place, such as the G7/G8 group, the OECD, the
World Bank, the IMF, and a newly streamlined GATT, now known
as the World Trade Organization. While these particular political
responses to the pressures of globalization remain limited
in scope and limited real authority, they are liable to expansion
and consolidation as capitalism continues to globalize.
2.
In part as a corollary of these same pressures, there has
been a proliferation over the last few decades of multi-nation
blocs such the EU, NAFTA, MERCOSUR, ASEAN, APEC, CARICOM,
and many others. These blocs, too, represent institutional
responses to the stresses created by the steady spilling over
of national capitalisms beyond their traditional political
boundaries. They remain in various stages of development at
the present time, with the EU being obviously in the vanguard.
However, because they involve only small numbers of participants,
they are clearly more manageable as political units (i.e.
internal transactions costs problems are relatively restrained
and consensus is easier to attain) in comparison with actual
or putative global organizations.
3.
Sovereign states and national economies remain dominant elements
of the contemporary political and economic landscape, though
they are clearly undergoing deep transformation. Individual
states no longer enjoy the same degree of sovereign political
autonomy that they once possessed, and under conditions of
intensifying globalization they find themselves less and less
able or willing to protect all the regional and sectional
interests within their jurisdictions. Numerous economic sectors
have been subject to massive debordering over the last few
decades so that it is increasingly difficult, if not impossible,
to say precisely where, say, the American economy ends and
the German or Japanese economies begin. As a result, some
of the regulatory activities that were formerly carried out
under the aegis of the central state are being assimilated
into institutions at supra-national levels of definition;
at the same time, other functions have been drifting down
to institutions whose range of operation is more local or
regional.
4. Accordingly, and most importantly for the purposes of the
present chapter, there has been a resurgence of region-based
forms of economic and political organization, with the clearest
expression of this tendency being found in certain large global
city-regions. That said, the economic and political trajectories
of these city-regions cannot be fully understood except in
relationship to the complex hierarchy of interpenetrating
territorial scales referred to above.
The
notion of a resurgence of region-based economic and political
organizations requires further elaboration. The propensity
for certain types of economic activity -- manufacturing and
service sectors alike -- to gather together in dense locational
clusters appears to have been intensifying in recent decades.
This quest for mutual proximity on the part of all manner
of economic agents at the present time is in significant degree
a strategic response to heightened economic competition which
-- in many segments of the economy -- has intensified uncertainty
and placed a premium on learning and innovation. Clustering
enables firms to respond to these challenges by allowing them
greater levels of operational flexibility and by enhancing
their innovative capacities. Globalization has accentuated
this process, though it is by no means the exclusive cause
of it, so that with the internationalization of markets, the
economies of global city-regions have grown accordingly. Large
city-regions are thus coming to function as territorial platforms
from which concentrated groups or networks of firms contest
global markets. At the same time, many regions are now subject
to intensified cross-border competitive pressures. They are
thus faced with the choice of either submitting to these pressures
passively, or engaging actively in institution-building and
policy-making in an effort to turn globalization as far as
possible to their benefit. The choice is an especially critical
one for city-regions because central governments nowadays
are finding it increasingly difficult to deal with the varied
demands of all the different localities that they oversee,
especially as the latter are often are marked by quite idiosyncratic
problems. To complicate this state of affairs, many city-regions
are also finding themselves faced with important new tasks
of local political integration and representation. These tasks
are of special urgency at a time when global city-regions
function more and more as poles of attraction for low-wage
labor migrants from all over the world, so that almost everywhere
their populations are becoming increasingly polyglot and interspersed
with marginalized social groups. As a consequence of this,
many city-regions today are being confronted with pressing
issues related to political participation and the local reconstruction
of political identity and citizenship.
The
new map of the world that is coming into being as these trends
take their course can in large degree be represented in terms
of the four intersecting territorial scales of economic and
political relations described above, together with a series
of cross-cutting relational forms ranging from international
civil bodies to the far-flung operations of multinational
corporations. At the geographic base of the whole system lies
a mosaic or archipelago of large city-regions constituting
one of the principal structural networks of the new global
economy (Veltz, 1996). It is to the economic functions of
these localized economic systems that we now turn our attention.
City-Regions
as the Motors of the Global Economy
It has long been predicted that improvements in transportation
and communications technologies, in terms of both cost and
quality, will eventually undermine any need for urban concentration.
With each round of technological change in this area, scholars
and journalists keep telling us that large-scale urbanization
is a thing of the past. But with each such round of development
cities not only do not disappear, they become larger and more
important. This is because although advances in modern transportation
and communications technologies enable many forms of economic
and social interaction to occur over ever-greater distances,
in other cases they actually heighten the need for proximity.
The key to understanding why this is true lies in the ways
that different economic activities are interconnected in terms
of what we might call their transactional or network relationships
to each other and to the rest of the world.
In
very schematic terms, two different kinds of productive activity
are typically to be found in any advanced economic system,
each of them corresponding to a fundamentally different type
of network structure. On the one hand, certain kinds of production
are highly routinized: they rely on forms of knowledge that
are relatively well codified and on machines and work processes
where repetition is the dominant pattern of action. In economic
terms, this means that it is possible to plan this sort of
activity with some degree of confidence and to carry it out
at very large scales. The necessary materials and inputs used
in production can thus often be acquired according to a given
schedule, and they can be purchased in large volumes. This
means, too, that these materials and inputs can be brought
in cheaply over large distances, for the ability to plan and
to purchase in large volumes means that their unit costs can
be kept low. Under these circumstances, the linkages between
functionally related firms are likely to have a rather limited
impact on locational decisions, and firms will be relatively
free to seek out locations quite distant from one another.
In practice, and because production is routinized in this
type of system, the chosen locations will often coincide with
pools of cheap, unskilled labor, sometimes far from any major
urban center.
On
the other hand, we find economic sectors where quite different
kinds of conditions hold. Vast areas of the contemporary economy
involve activities where enormous uncertainty prevails, and
where there are strong limits on producers' abilities to routinize
or simplify their operations, especially in regard to their
mutual interactions. In high-technology industry, for example,
producers are frequently faced not only with rapid shifts
in basic technologies themselves, but also with demands for
their products that vary greatly from one customer to another
and from one moment to the next. In high-level business and
financial services, the changing project-oriented and client-oriented
product means that firms must be organized so as to vary the
mix of skills and resources that they bring to each particular
job; further, the skills and resources themselves (especially
human intellectual assets) are not widely available because
they are quite specialized. In industries faced with markets
that fluctuate because of constant design changes or fashion
effects (more broadly, product differentiation processes),
firms must be prepared to change and recombine equipment and
labor and to monitor shifts in the market, often on a day-to-day
basis.
In
the latter circumstances, firms find it difficult to routinize
their operations and to plan their relations with other firms,
or even with their own workers over extended time frames.
They come to depend on networks that facilitate change and
recombination, in contrast to the more rigid kinds of networks
that typically underpin the first group of firms. Change and
recombination are potentially very costly, however, because
they depend on high levels of access to a wide variety of
information and resources. Firms need to know what different
kinds of suppliers and (shifting) market opportunities are
available to them. Workers need to know about alternative
job opportunities, especially where labor markets are characterized
by high levels of flexibility. Often, and in spite of the
informatics revolution, the knowledge underlying these processes
is quite tacit. Acquiring this economically-useful knowledge
in a timely fashion depends on human relationships and on
being able to interpret the information in meaningful ways.
Simultaneously, where economic specialization and flexibility
are strongly present, rapid shifts in underlying networks
of transactions occur as firms negotiate new contracts or
restructure their buying and selling relationships, and as
workers shift from one job to another. These are networks,
in short, that are characterized by high levels of uncertainty,
instability, and complexity. In these circumstances, the costs
of transacting rise greatly as distance increases, and with
the geographical scattering of producers, inefficiencies rapidly
set in.
At
the same time, producers in these industries gain significant
competitive advantages from their co-presence in the dense
transactional networks that come into being as they buy and
sell from each other, hire workers from the local labor pool,
participate in both formal and informal business associations,
and so on. These networks underpin an atmosphere rich in constantly
shifting bodies of information (much of it quite informal)
about technologies, markets, and product designs. As such,
they help to foster economic creativity and innovation in
many different types of sectors, including, in particular,
some of the most dynamic leading edges of the contemporary
economy such as high-technology industry, services, and cultural-products
industries.
In
the post-War years, and up until about the early 1970s, most
of the major capitalist economies seemed to be moving steadily
toward greater routinization of production, especially in
manufacturing. However, for a variety of complex reasons,
beginning with the economic crises of the early and mid-1970s,
economic environments tended to become much less stable than
they had been, forcing firms in many sectors to adopt more
flexible technologies and organizational patterns. In addition,
new digital technologies were now encouraging destandardization
of production processes, just as rising incomes and proliferating
market niches were stimulating a search for wider product
variety. For all of these reasons, the second type of production
described above has come to be pervasive, if not now dominant,
in the advanced capitalist societies, so that increasingly
important shares of output and employment are now accounted
for by flexibly-networked production systems or value chains.
These
arguments lead to the essential question of the relationships
between these flexibly-networked systems and large cities,
and this question hinges fundamentally on the issue of economic
productivity, performance, and innovation. For one thing,
the different firms and actors that participate in these networks
all receive a tremendous boost to their efficiency by being
part of tightly-linked and spatially-concentrated clusters,
not only because clustering greatly mitigates transactions
costs, but also because of the flexibility and information
effects referred to above. For another, creativity and innovation
within the production system are much enhanced, in part because
of the great variety of different skills, sensibilities, and
experiences embodied in the labor force, and in part because
the agglomeration of interdependent producers in one place
increases the probability of encounters in which novel insights
and/or economically-useful knowledge are engendered. In addition,
firms have greater access to a more varied group of suppliers
and business opportunities than they would have if they were
all at widely separated locations. The local availability
of a wide range of specialized suppliers and workers permits
firms to be more flexible, and frees them from investment
in the excess inventories that would otherwise be necessary
where the risks of breakdowns in supply chains or market outlets
are high. Overhead costs can be kept to a relatively low level
because equipment and inventories are stored, as it were,
in the networked collectivity of producers. Workers, too,
are able to tap into richer bodies of local labor market information
as well as to increase their access to potential job opportunities,
thus enhancing their ability to change jobs, or to find new
jobs when they are unemployed. Of course, the contemporary
economy is also marked by well-developed long-distance supplier
relationships and recruiting activities. But oftentimes, as
we shall see, these relationships also feed into highly localized
production networks.
Productivity
and performance are thus raised by urban concentration in
two ways. First, concentration secures overall efficiency
of the economic system. Second, it intensifies creativity,
learning, and innovation both by the increased flexibility
of producers that it makes possible and by the enormous flows
of ideas and knowledge that occur alongside the transactional
links within localized industrial networks. Such networks
are typically to be found at the economic cores of the world's
major city-regions today, and in many cases, they are the
basis of significant new rounds of urban expansion. Moreover,
the economies of these city-regions are to an increasing degree
tied in to world markets, thus stimulating yet further growth
which in turn encourages more specialized producers to appear
in any given network. The films of Hollywood, the semiconductors
of Silicon Valley, the banking and financial services of New
York and London, and the fashions of Paris all represent the
outputs of clustered flexible production networks whose fortunes
are strongly tied to world market demand. Other examples include
mechanical engineering in Baden-Württemburg and Bavaria, the
small-firm craft-based industries of northern Italy, the jewelry
industry in Bangkok, or furniture production in Guadalajara,
Mexico. In this manner, global city-regions come to function
increasingly as the regional motors of the global economy,
that is, as dynamic local networks of economic relationships
caught up in more extended world-wide webs of inter-regional
competition and exchange.
To
be sure, this description is only a starting point for a fuller
analysis of the economic structure of global city-regions.
But the essential key to understanding why, in an era of generally
declining transportation and communication costs, we still
have a world that is organized around large urban regions
(rather than around a more diffuse pattern of location), lies
in the ways in which the economies of these regions have become
so closely tied in with clustered flexible networks of firms
that compete on increasingly extended markets.
The
Social Geography of Global City-Regions
The forces shaping the emergence of global city-regions have
had marked impacts on their internal social geography -- patterns
of social stratification, intra-metropolitan income distribution
and demographics, and ways of daily life. Three striking outcomes
dominate these localized effects of globalization and economic
restructuring.
The
first is the increased cultural and demographic heterogeneity
induced primarily by large-scale migration into global city-regions.
Migration has been oriented most insistently to the largest
city-regions, creating some of the most culturally diverse
urban agglomerations in history. As with so much that has
been happening in this age of intensified globalization, this
increased cultural heterogeneity is associated with both explosive
dangers and creative new opportunities for social mobility
and social justice.
The
second main outcome is a pronounced change in the spatial
morphology of global city-regions. Whereas most metropolitan
regions in the past were focused mainly on one or perhaps
two clearly-defined central cities, the city-regions of today
are becoming increasingly polycentric or multi-clustered agglomerations.
Two extreme examples of such multi-clustered agglomerations
are represented by Shanghai and the Pearl River Delta, global
city-regions that each contain more than thirty million inhabitants.
Moreover, in virtually all global city-regions there has been
a rapid growth of outer cities and edge cities, as formerly
peripheral or rural areas far from old downtown cores have
developed into urban centers in their own right. The blurring
of once rigid and clearly defined boundaries has been an integral
part of the globalization process and the new information
age, and this is now reflected in the increasingly ambiguous
meaning of what is urban, suburban, exurban, or indeed rural
or not urban at all. Thus, what has been happening can be
described as a simultaneous and complex process of decentralization
and recentralization of the city-region. Many older established
central agglomerations have been experiencing an outflow of
certain population groups and employment activities, but the
spaces they have vacated have also typically been re-occupied
by new immigrant communities and economic functions. At the
same time, new poles of urban growth are being created in
the periphery, stretching and pinning down the urban fabric
in a recentered regional constellation of cities. Here again
there arise both positive and negative consequences for political
and economic health and well-being.
The
third major effect of globalization and economic restructuring
on the social geography of city-regions is closely related
to the previous two, but is even more challenging in its direct
political and policy implications. It is becoming apparent
that globalization and its associated forms of economic change
tend to widen the gap between the wealthy and the poor in
economic, social and spatial terms. Globalization intensifies
these trends by stimulating the growth of high-wage occupations
in large cities while promoting (especially in a context of
large-scale immigration from low-wage countries) the proliferation
of marginal, low-skill jobs. For example, in the early 1990s
it was reported that the disparity between wealth and poverty
had grown in all the developed industrial countries, in both
big and small cities. This gap tends to peak in the largest
global city-regions, particularly because a high proportion
of the rich tends to live in these places. In many such places,
too, there is rapid growth of the welfare-dependent urban
underclass as well as of the working poor, as represented
for example by households with multiple jobholders who are
nonetheless unable to live comfortably above the poverty line.
Any attempt to explain the detailed causes of increasing segmentation
and socio-economic inequalities in global city-regions is
inevitably highly controversial, and there are many analysts
across the political spectrum who argue that the observable
disparities in these regions are a result of rapid economic
growth rather than of globalization as such. Whatever the
final verdict on this question may be, there is good reason
to place the issue of rising levels of social and spatial
segmentation high on the policy agenda in any discussion of
the problems facing the development of global city-regions
in the new millennium. At the level of national policy, for
example, there seems to be a perplexing trade-off between
social protection and job generation. In comparison to most
of Western Europe, the US has been very successful with regard
to job generation but much less so in dealing with rising
socio-economic inequalities. Even in the European Union, however,
there are cases where the both objectives have been met simultaneously,
as in Denmark or the Netherlands. Hence, there are several
different policy contexts where mutual learning might be highly
productive and where some progressive middle ground or third
way (Giddens, 1998) might be profitably explored between free-wheeling
neoliberalism and traditional welfare statism.
At the scale of the city-region, there are further pressing
social policy challenges. High on the list of these challenges
is how best to accommodate expanding immigrant populations,
for there can be little doubt that immigration, especially
into the larger global city-regions, will continue well into
the twenty-first century. There is much evidence to suggest
that immigrant populations play a vital role in regional economic
development, both as cheap labor and as innovative entrepreneurs,
especially in sectors marked by many small firms and flexible
production arrangements like clothing, electronics, and a
wide variety of services. However, without appropriate measures
for social integration, housing, and education, it is likely
to prove difficult to maintain or enlarge the productive role
of immigrant workers in global city-regions and avoid political
clashes with the domestic workforce.
The rising levels of social segmentation observable in most
global city-regions have stimulated some innovative local
responses. In the USA, for example, in the absence of adequate
local government attention to their interests and problems,
many low-income groups are now forming into a wide diversity
of self-help and community-based organizations, and this trend
is no doubt likely to intensify in the future. New coalitions
like these with their focus on basic needs such as shelter,
water, health, decent jobs, and living wages will almost certainly
play a growing role in the reorganized civil society of global
city-regions in the future. Yet the merits of this kind of
substitution of civil for governmental action are debatable,
for there is no guarantee that it will generate those equitable
forms of social protection, which are one of the cornerstones
of democratic practice in many societies. A very different
kind of situation exists at the opposite end of the economic
spectrum in global city-regions. Those at the top of the income
ladder seem increasingly to be withdrawing from civil society
and civic responsibility into fortressed households and gated
communities, creating their own kind of private residential
governance structures or "privatopias" (Mackenzie, 1994).
As we shall see below, this fundamentally undemocratic approach
to the organization of urban space is even more marked in
a number of developing countries. In the new geography of
the global city-region social distance as well as economic
distance between the haves and have-nots is steadily on the
rise.
The socio-spatial reorganization of global city-regions has
had other negative consequences as well. As these cities have
grown and extended outward, and as their populations have
become more and more diverse, a complex set of spatial mismatches
in the location of jobs, housing, and transit facilities have
been created, giving rise to severely adverse effects on the
quality of life as well as (indirectly) to many negative environmental
impacts. At one extreme, this state of affairs has compounded
the problems of the inner city poor, for as good jobs disappear
to the outer cities, the existing housing stock becomes excessively
run down and overcrowded, and homelessness rises. At another
extreme, rapid outward expansion of the urban fringe often
creates isolated peripheral areas where families attracted
by cheap housing find themselves stranded so far from their
jobs that they must travel for extended periods of time each
way to work.
The
culturally heterogeneous, polycentric, socially and spatially
segmented global city-region is thus a highly fragmented chess-board
of uneven development sprawling ever outward. The expanded
city-region functions as a vital platform of competitive advantage
and generative growth in the global economy, but at the same
time this regional world of production (Storper, 1997) often
rests upon institutional structures of governance and planning
that are inadequate to maintain effective social order, not
to mention continued economic health. The creation of new
and responsive frameworks of regional governance capable of
sustaining economic development, instigating a sense of cooperative
regional identity, and promoting innovative ways of achieving
regional democracy and economic fair play is the great challenge
for the future.
New
Governance Issues in Global City-Regions
Until recently, regions as political entities were mainly
thought of as administrative units nested within the territory
of the nation state. Regions were thus coterminous with the
local level of government, or constituted sub-territories
within a national territory, mere lower levels in a hierarchy
of administrative-cum-political arrangements from more to
the less general and significant. To be sure, federal states
have always engaged in relatively more power sharing between
different levels of government than have unitary states, but
in the post-War period, even federal governments tended to
exert more and more influence over lower levels through increased
fiscal transfers designed to realize ambitious national goals.
In both cases, regions were for the most part seen as units
for efficient administration of public goods and services
that for technical reasons were best delivered at this geographical
level. Beginning in the 1970s, however, a new regionalism
began to emerge and steadily to superimpose itself on this
older devolutive regionalism. The new regionalism is not so
much an effect of initiatives flowing out from central government
as it is a direct local response to stresses and strains set
in motion by the emergence of the city-region as an important
actor in the world economy.
The
term governance is now widely employed to describe the multifaceted
types of social and economic coordination at issue here. Concretely,
many processes of governance today involve not just agencies
of government but also non-governmental organizations, civil
associations, private-public partnerships, and so on. The
term can apply equally well to coordination of the complex
economic and social environment of the global city-region
as a whole as it can to collective action in regard to specific
segments of urban life (such as particular sectors of production
or individual neighborhoods). One important domain of governance
can be identified in relation to possible and actual responses
of city-regions to the new global competition. The global
market and new transportation and communications technologies
have encouraged a restructuring of economic competition such
that city-regions now increasingly emerge as privileged sites
of generalized competitive advantage (Keating, 1997). In this
context, the specific character of different regions is of
critical importance: local policies are increasingly being
formulated to intensify competitive advantages, encourage
new firm formation, improve the economic environment for local
firms, and make the local business climate more attractive
to mobile capital. These activist local economic development
policies differ markedly from previous (top-down) approaches
to regional development that tended to focus on questions
of equity between regions within a given national territory.
Indeed, since the incentives to creative intervention are
greatest for those wealthy metropolitan areas with the most
at stake in global competition, local competitive policies
frequently work against equity between regions.
Here,
a number of dilemmas haunt local economic development policies.
One of these is connected to the widespread practice of seeking
to promote development by attracting inward investment. This
usually involves competitive bidding wars between different
places, i.e. locational tournaments, especially directed at
attracting the branch plants of transnational firms. In the
USA, this practice is generally favored by central-city business
elites who are most likely to benefit from it, while various
neighborhood groups see themselves as being excluded from
any benefits that may accrue. Moreover, much research from
both the United States and Western Europe suggests that policies
devoted to assisting and retaining existing firms are more
effective in stimulating local economic growth than are policies
committed to capturing inward investment. Competitive tournaments
with other city-regions in the effort to attract mobile capital
probably offer a much lower (perhaps even negative) rate of
return per dollar expended to the local community. Yet even
if we accept that coordination of the diverse synergies in
global city-regions is likely to be the most effective way
to proceed, how best to promote these synergies and how to
design institutional frameworks for this purpose is by no
means clear.
In recent times, the term governance has acquired two broadly
opposing connotations with respect to the role of the public
sector. One of these signifies the merging of the public and
private in loose partnerships, where the idea of government
as a set of political relations (involving struggles and debates
over both objectives and policies) is replaced with the idea
of the public sphere as a relatively limited set of arrangements
for harmonizing various private interests under conditions
of strict market failure. From this essentially neoliberal
viewpoint, city-region governance would involve the replacement
of confrontation or competition between private and public
interests with a technocratic approach to the solution of
local problems. This line of attack tends to put a premium
on the creation of a positive "business climate," so that
the locality becomes more attractive to new investors and
firms can more effectively organize for successful inter-place
competition. In other words, what is good for local firms
is seen as being good for the entire city-region. A second
sense of the term sees governance as involving a set of complex
institutional reactions to the broader problems of economic
and social adjustment in the emerging global-local system.
From this more institutionalist point of view, the governance
of city-regions is part of a larger problem of contemporary
global coordination. There is no single geographical scale
at which political regulation of the world economy or of its
component parts can be secured. The critical issue here is
coordination across geographical scales, between the policies
pursued at supranational, national, and regional levels, involving
both formal and informal coordination, and the possibilities
of popular input into their formation and implementation at
all levels (Hewitt de Alcántara 1998; Scott, 1998).
In
light of the latter remarks, and as city-regions emerge into
prominence as durable elements of the global system, they
face many daunting tasks. One of these is concerned with achieving
the right mix of cooperation and competition between firms.
Balancing the return to short-term competitive behavior by
firms with the need for long-term cooperation among them to
ensure steady local economic growth via resource pooling and
mutual learning is a major challenge. Another concerns the
ability of the national and supranational political units
within which global city-regions are embedded to coordinate
their interactions. A yet further task concerns the codification
of local practices, either in terms of fixed rules of government
or flexible rules of inter-organizational and inter-individual
negotiation, the former maintaining formal safeguards over
representation but at the expense of responsiveness to rapid
socio-economic change. Finally, there is the delicate problem
of efficient and streamlined public action in the face of
rapidly shifting external conditions versus public accountability.
Without a high degree of accountability local social inequities
(in the form of income and wealth disparities, differential
access to local foci of power, disparities in public goods
and service provision between different areas within the city-region,
etc.) created by the drive to efficiency is apt to lead to
social conflict and instability (Jessop 1998).
Global City-Regions in Developing Countries
The processes of urban and regional development we are describing
here are not limited to the wealthiest countries. They are
global in extent; indeed, many of the largest global city-regions
are located outside of the developed world. Some of the most
prominent examples include Bangkok, Buenos Aires, Cairo, Jakarta,
Lagos, Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Shanghai, or
Teheran.
In many cases, such city-regions developed as the principal
concentrations of advanced economic activity in their national
economies. In some countries, rapid industrialization is dependent
on the spatial concentration of infrastructure and productive
activity. The modern productive sector requires access to
a wide range of suppliers and services, which initially can
be made available at reasonable cost in only a small number
of places in these countries, due to their limited overall
level of development. Particularly when there is a national
push for rapid industrial development, it tends to result
in super-agglomerations. These large urban centers also become
the privileged basing points for the biggest national and
transnational companies. The location of such companies in
these cities reinforces local growth and sustains a complex
tertiary sector in the national economy.
Such
development often acts as an attraction for the rural poor
in these countries, who go to the city in search of higher
incomes. This pull factor, coupled with the extensive modernization
of agricultural activity and policies that push people off
the land, frequently generates extremely high rates of local
population growth, and results in a situation where a small
number of cities in these countries comes to account for a
high proportion of the national population. This further helps
to explain the phenomenon of megalocephalic urban development
in developing countries.
It
should be emphasized that the extreme urban concentration
found in many developing countries results from the combination
of two essential dynamics: one of these concerns forces similar
to those found in developed countries and that lead to the
appearance of large productive clusters; the other involves
the particular circumstances of developing countries, consisting
of an initial state of relatively low levels of urbanization,
restricted modern sectors, and unevenly developed infrastructure.
When these countries are confronted with national policies
favoring rapid industrial development, the result is the appearance
of one or a small number of hyper-large urban regions.
The
social and environmental problems engendered by this process
of urbanization are often more pronounced than in the developed
countries, all the while sharing certain of their basic features.
Even with spatial concentration of infrastructure as a strategy
to generate modern industrial development, infrastructural
conditions in these city-regions are frequently far from adequate.
Transportation, sanitation, housing, and water systems are
generally unevenly distributed in metropolitan space, and
severe shortages are common. Indeed, there are often such
great discrepancies between social need and economically-feasible
supply that one can speak of veritable crisis conditions in
many such cities. To this must be added an understanding of
social and economic power in many developing nations. Poor,
disenfranchised rural populations are often pushed off the
land by unjust economic policies, by physical violence, or
by the monopolization of land resources by the rich. They
end up in cities, where again they are subject to the economic
and social turmoil involved in becoming part of the urban
subproletariat.
In developing countries it is even more difficult to resolve
the problems and predicaments of global city-regions than
in developing countries. In the first place, even though these
regions are often far richer than the rest of the national
territories in which they are located, they also invariably
contain populations marked by huge economic disparities. In
the absence of progressive income redistribution policies,
it becomes effectively impossible to finance needed improvements
in infrastructure and services. In the second place, precisely
because there is a limited number of city-regions that can
function as basing-points for the most modern parts of the
economy, and as points of contact with the global economy,
there is usually a diminished tendency to spatial dispersion
of population and economic activity so that relaxation of
the pressures on these centers is unlikely to occur. For example,
even though the São Paulo metropolitan area accounts for a
smaller share of national economic output in Brazil today
than in 1970 (45% as opposed to 65%), it continues to grow
and spread in absolute terms at a rate that makes it quite
difficult for infrastructure supply to catch up to demand.
This experience contrasts with that of many developed countries,
where smaller city-regions often absorb enough of national
growth at a certain point to flatten the urban hierarchy (in
relative terms), and to reduce pressures on the biggest city-regions.
Most developing countries, therefore, remain trapped within
a cycle of mega-city growth.
Because of the nature of development processes based on rapid
industrialization and high levels of internal population migration,
the populations of global city-regions in developing economies
are almost always highly segmented in terms of social class,
income and sometimes, racial, terms. These city-regions then
assume spatial forms that reflect this social segmentation,
as reflected above all in the segregation of rich and poor.
At one extreme, one finds massive poor communities living
in shanty-towns, favelas and bidonvilles, and at the other
the more spacious and well-equipped communities of the middle-classes
and the rich. In many such global city-regions, there are
complex social frictions having to do with the combination
of segregation, inequality and proximity. Violence, or the
fear of it, becomes a central preoccupation of the upper classes,
pushing them toward forms of fortress settlements, gated high-rise
communities surrounded by walls and guarded entries. This
architecture of fear only exacerbates the fragmented character
of urban space, and generates additional problems for infrastructure
provision, as the rich attempt to secede socially and politically
from the space of the urban community as a whole.
Recently,
the global city-regions of many developing countries have
been affected by a double economic trend. There are first
of all certain tendencies for the movement of economic activities
outward from their metropolitan cores and into exurban fringe
areas; second of all, there is a limited tendency in some
countries for the migration of routine productive activities
to smaller towns, i.e., activities that have become less dependent
on the advanced services and inputs only found in the largest
urban areas. But, as already noted, these tendencies are far
from being strong enough to stem the growth of large cities
in the national economy or to reduce the enormous pressure
on infrastructure and services in the major city-regions.
Continuing
economic globalization has greatly reinforced the attractiveness
of global city-regions in developing countries for major national
and transnational firms. In many countries, firms that used
to produce primarily for the national market are finding themselves
faced with the effects of trade liberalization and the dismantling
of national policies that provided protection and incentives.
The concomitant requirement that they sell more of their output
on global markets, and compete against imports, makes many
of them more dependent on the advanced production conditions
available only in global city-regions. Hence, globalization,
liberalization and - in some cases - privatization of formerly-nationalized
industries, may reinforce the economic attractiveness of the
main city-regions and exacerbate the developmental problems
referred to above. In addition, many countries are now abandoning
regional policies that aimed at encouraging decentralization
within the national territory, and they are doing so either
for budgetary reasons or because they are redefining the goals
of economic policy away from the protection of national markets
and toward the promotion of export-orientation of their industrial
and service sectors. In some cases, this has unleashed interregional
bidding wars for new investments, so that even though advanced
activities go increasingly to the main city-regions, other
regions now pay dearly -- often to multinational corporations
-- for such investment as they can attract, further weakening
national and local fiscal capacities to provide public goods
which are sorely needed to compete more effectively in the
new, globally competitive economy.
Many of the current attempts in developing countries to deal
with the problems of their city-regions are based on policy
frameworks that are likely to be inadequate, or that are imported
from developed countries into contexts so fundamentally different
that their outcomes are often perverse. For example, experiments
in privatizing urban services have been suggested or attempted
in a number of places. But privatization in a context where
basic universal service and infrastructure provision have
not yet been attained is likely to aggravate classical market
failures, while leading to improved services only for those
who already have them. Tradable rights in certain services
(e.g. rights to re-sell water) are likely to have some short-term
efficiency improving effects, but will do little to ensure
the extension of infrastructure to the population that does
not yet have it. Decentralization of taxing and infrastructure-
and service-building authority is likely to enable the richer
regions to devote more of their resources to their own problems,
assuming that they have effective management systems for doing
so, but it could result in even greater inter-regional disparities
within the national territory. Political decentralization,
involving the participation of NGOs and community associations
may be helpful in achieving somewhat greater democratic voice
and in mobilizing certain kinds of disenfranchised populations,
but it is difficult to imagine it resolving the extreme gaps
between rich and poor and supplanting the role of transparent,
universal democratic processes in articulating needs and rights
in urban governance. Fundamentally, many such reforms appear
most useful in societies that have already attained a relatively
advanced level of economic and social development, where certain
public goods, levels of education and health, skills, literacy,
and participation have already been achieved, and where the
question is now how to make governance of complex systems
work better.
Global
city-regions in developing countries represent the best and
the worst of the development process. They are places where
highly productive and innovative economies are often in evidence,
but they are also places where the multifaceted market failures,
historical imbalances, and brutal power relations of the development
process are painfully in evidence. Large cities in developing
countries thus constitute a particularly problematical variant
of the phenomenon of global city-regions in general. That
said, and despite the desperate social conditions that are
commonly found in the large cities of these countries, economic
development in one way or another is probably more likely
to be achieved in combination with large-scale urbanization
than in its absence.
Democracy,
Citizenship, and Global City-Regions
Modern thinking about democracy developed alongside the expansion
of the territorial state in Europe from the sixteenth century
on. Actual practice, of course, had older roots in some of
the cities of ancient Greece and in the late-medieval resurgence
of civic republicanism in the Italian city-states. But by
the nineteenth century in Europe and elsewhere the fate of
democracy was increasingly tied to that of the territorial
state. Indeed, the right to national self-determination has
become one of the primary measures of democratic practice,
enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations. States, of
course, have traditionally been the key referent of the political;
a whole range of ideals and the practices built up around
them -- citizenship, obligation, general authority, rights,
political representation, and so on -- have been tightly associated
with the achievement of statehood. Key debates in political
theory and jurisprudence reflect the close ties of these ideals
and practices to the history of states and the political struggles
that have occurred in order to establish and control distinctive,
bordered territories. For example, the roles of obligation
and dissent are defined almost entirely in terms of loyalty
to specific states and their institutions; debates about the
optimum size of community for democracy are always conducted
in terms of various territorial entities; and social groups
conceived of as capable of self-rule are typically defined
in terms of geographical contiguity or adjacency (Agnew, 1995).
The
authority of even the most powerful territorial states today,
however, is being redefined in relation to a world economy
that is no longer a sum of distinct national economies in
highly controlled interaction, but is rather based on economic,
social, cultural and informational flows that straddle the
boundary-making and territory-protecting activities of states.
In this context, it is increasingly difficult to think about
essential political concepts such as democracy and citizenship
as being exclusively attached to the unified territorial unit
of the nation state. The emerging world of global city-regions
poses two particular problems given conventional understandings
of democracy and citizenship. The first is that city-regions
do not always fit neatly within existing state boundaries.
In contemporary Europe, for example, urban spheres of influence
frequently and increasingly flow across international boundaries.
The second is that the city or region itself potentially becomes
the object of primary loyalty and membership rather than the
state in which it is located, a transformation that would
already seem to be incipiently under way in such countries
as Canada, Germany, or Italy. With economic life and social
existence increasingly tied to the fate of the city and its
region rather than to the state, some aspects of citizenship
may begin to become associated once more, as they were in
earlier historical periods, with city-regions and not with
states.
The latter point has a number of important implications. One
is that residence in a city-region and not just official state
citizenship now becomes a significant basis for political
activity. For example, in many cities with substantial immigrant
populations, there are now serious proposals on foot to allow
immigrants to vote in local elections, and this has extensive
reformist possibilities. Another is that with increases in
the exchange of people, goods and capital between city-regions
all over the world, these multiple flows will not be effectively
regulated at the local level. Thus, at the very time when
city-regions are facing ever-greater burdens of economic,
social and fiscal responsibility, they are also being faced
with forces they cannot hope to control. Consequently, effective
governance in the new world system would also entail the creation
of supranational and global levels of inter-regional regulation,
and for this, new forms of political organization will be
needed. In the absence of complementary structures of regulation
at higher levels of political authority, then, the current
devolution of power from states to city-regions can in some
ways only aggravate the democratic deficit in the current
world of territorial states attempting to control increasingly
diffuse networks of economic power (Held 1991).
The achievement of multi-level democratic governance faces
two crucial barriers. The first is the continuing conflation
of citizenship with nationality. The second is that powerful
states have been the main advocates of globalization. The
US government, for example, through its sponsorship of the
World Trade Organization and financial liberalization has
been the most important enabling agent of economic globalization.
It can thus scarcely be expected to endorse political reforms
that essentially undermine its power, unless the course of
globalization deepens so much that a reassertion of state
power becomes next to impossible. Today, we are still quite
far from that possibility.
Ideological and Political Challenges in the New World System
The world system appears to be moving into an economic and
political configuration quite different from the old center-periphery
model of international development, where whole states were
on one or the other side of the great development divide.
The profound changes that have been occurring on the economic
front are increasingly giving rise to diverse institutional
and political responses and experiments in coordination at
different geographic levels from the global to the local.
The political and institutional shifts going on at each territorial
scale are poorly understood, but the scale that is represented
by the emerging global mosaic of city-regions is certainly
one of the most puzzling. Precisely because these city-regions
constitute the basic motors of a rapidly globalizing economy,
much is at stake as they steadily sharpen their political
identities and institutional presence. ************************************
As the complex trends alluded to in these pages become more
and more apparent, a further question arises as to what macro-political
or ideological formations are best suited to define institution-building
and policy-making efforts in the coming decades. Giddens (1998)
has forcefully argued that two main sets of political principles
appear to be moving toward a major contest for ascendancy.
One of these is a currently dominant neoliberal view - a view
that prescribes minimal government interference in and maximum
market organization of economic relations (and that is sometimes
but erroneously taken to be a virtually inescapable counterpart
of globalization). In view of what we have written above,
neoliberalism, certainly in the version that crudely advocates
laissez-faire as a universal panacea for economic problems,
would seem to offer a seriously deficient political vision,
notwithstanding the current vigorous expansion (in some quarters
at least) of the global casino economy. The other is a new
social democratic or social market perspective, which, especially
in Western Europe, has enjoyed notable electoral success of
late. On the economic front, social democratic approaches
are prepared to acknowledge and to work with the efficiency-seeking
properties of markets where these are consistent with standards
of social fairness and long-term economic well-being, but
to advocate selective intervention where they are not. As
such, a social democratic politics would seem to be well armed
to face up to the tasks of building the political infrastructures
and enabling conditions (at every territorial scale) that
are each day becoming more critical to sustained high levels
of economic performance and social stability as the new world
system comes increasingly into focus. At the city-region scale,
in particular, and to repeat, these tasks can be centrally
identified with the compelling need to promote those local
levels of efficiency, productivity, competitiveness, and social
fairness that markets alone can never fully secure. At the
same time, the question of local democratic practice -- how
to define the substantive content of citizenship and how to
establish appropriate forums of popular participation -- is
inescapably joined to the more technocratic issues raised
by the challenges of economic coordination in global city-regions
(Ascher, 1998).
Globalization has potentially both a dark, regressive side
and a more hopeful, progressive side. If the analysis presented
here turns out to be broadly correct, then those views that
have been expressed of late by some commentators to the effect
that any deepening trend to globalization must constitute
a retrograde step for the masses of humanity can be taken
as a salutory warning about a possible future world, but by
no means as a representation of all possible future worlds.
Globalization under the aegis of a triumphant neoliberalism
would no doubt lead to greatly increased social inequalities
and tensions within city-regions and exacerbate the discrepancies
in growth rates and developmental potentials between them.
Alternative and realistic possibilities can be plausibly advanced,
however, as indicated above, and some form of reconstructed
social democratic politics would seem to offer a viable, fair,
and persuasive way of facing up to these questions.
References
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Agnew (1995) "Democracy and human rights after the Cold War,"
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The proceedings of this conference will be published in book
form by Oxford University Press.
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