Working PaperFirst publicationPublished version DOI: 10.48548/pubdata-1981 Handle: 20.500.14123/10206

Metropolitan Cities under Transition: The Example of Hamburg/Germany

Preview & Downloads

Chronological data

Date of first publication2010-02
Date of publication in PubData 2025-07-31

Language of the resource

English

Related external resources

Part of ISSN: 1860-5508
Working Paper Series in Economics

Publisher

Other contributors

Abstract

In the intermediate and long run energy prices and hence transportation costs are expected to increase significantly. According to the reasoning of the New Economic Geography this will strengthen the spreading forces and thus affect the economic landscape. Other influencing factors on the regional distribution of economic activity include the general trends of demographic and structural change. In industrialized countries, the former induces an overall reduction of population and labor force whereas the latter implies an ongoing shift to the tertiary sector and increased specialization. Basically, cities provide better conditions to cope with these challenges than rural regions. Since the general trends affect all economic spaces similarly, especially city-specific factors have to be considered in order to derive the impact of rising energy costs on future urban development. With respect to Hamburg regional peculiarities include the overall importance of the harbor as well as the existing composition of the industry and the service sector. The analysis highlights that rising energy and transportation costs will open up a range of opportunities for the metropolitan region.

Keywords

Urban Development; Demographic Change; Transportation Cost

Number of the series contribution

164

More information

DDC

330 :: Wirtschaft

Creation Context

Research