Infrastructure's Long-Lived Impact on Urban Development: Theory and Empirics

Motu Working Paper No. 14-11

40 Pages Posted: 1 Nov 2014 Last revised: 12 Nov 2014

See all articles by Arthur Grimes

Arthur Grimes

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust

Eyal Apatov

Oranga Tamariki Ministry for Children; Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust; Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment

Larissa Lutchman

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust

Anna Robinson

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust

Date Written: October 30, 2014

Abstract

We analyse impacts that infrastructure provision and other factors have on long run urban growth. Reflecting spatial equilibrium insights, growing cities have preferred attributes relative to other cities. These attributes may include natural characteristics, social amenities and transport infrastructure that have productive and/or amenity value. We outline a theoretical model that includes distance-related effects on individual utility and thence population location, and we test this model using historical data covering 1926 to 2006 across 56 New Zealand towns. Instruments dating back to 1880 are used to deal with potential endogeneity issues, and we use spatial-econometrics techniques to test for spatial spillovers between cities. Our analysis shows that four dominant factors have impacted positively on urban growth, especially since 1966: nearby land-use capability, human capital, sunshine hours and proximity to the country’s dominant city, Auckland.

Keywords: Infrastructure, city development, population growth, migration, spatial equilibrium

JEL Classification: H54, R12

Suggested Citation

Grimes, Arthur and Apatov, Eyal and Lutchman, Larissa and Robinson, Anna, Infrastructure's Long-Lived Impact on Urban Development: Theory and Empirics (October 30, 2014). Motu Working Paper No. 14-11, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2517085 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2517085

Arthur Grimes (Contact Author)

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust ( email )

19 Milne Terrace
Island Bay
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New Zealand

Eyal Apatov

Oranga Tamariki Ministry for Children ( email )

56 the terrace
PO Box 5488
Wellington 6011
New Zealand

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust ( email )

Level 1, 93 Cuba Street
P.O. Box 24390
Wellington, 6142
New Zealand

Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment ( email )

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HOME PAGE: http://https://www.mbie.govt.nz/

Larissa Lutchman

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust ( email )

Level 1, 93 Cuba Street
P.O. Box 24390
Wellington, 6142
New Zealand

Anna Robinson

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust ( email )

Level 1, 93 Cuba Street
P.O. Box 24390
Wellington, 6142
New Zealand

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