Urban Economics is an essential course that applies microeconomic principles to understand the spatial distribution of people and economic activity. It analyzes key issues such as location theory, land markets, housing, transportation, and the rationale for local government intervention. Participants will develop quantitative skills to evaluate policy impacts, understand the economic forces driving urban growth and decline, and assess the efficiency and equity of urban resource allocation. The course provides a rigorous, data-driven framework for making informed decisions about urban development.
Introduction
Objectives
The goal of this course is to apply economic principles to urban-scale problems and policy analysis. Upon completion, participants will be able to:
Target Audience
- Economists and Financial Analysts focusing on real estate or municipal finance
- Urban Planners and Policy Makers focused on economic development
- Real Estate Developers, Appraisers, and Investors
- Municipal Budget Analysts and Public Finance Officers
- Graduate Students in Economics, Planning, or Public Policy
- Consultants specializing in location analysis and impact assessment
- Transportation Planners analyzing cost-benefit ratios
Methodology
- Quantitative Problem Sets and Economic Modeling Exercises
- Case Studies: Analyzing the economic impact of major urban projects
- Discussions on the efficiency vs. equity trade-off in urban policy
- Individual Exercises: Conducting a basic fiscal impact analysis
- Guest Lectures from Economists and Real Estate Professionals
- Software-based demonstrations of urban economic models
Personal Impact
- Develop rigorous quantitative and analytical skills for policy evaluation
- Understand the complex economic forces driving real estate and land prices
- Improve decision-making regarding infrastructure investment and pricing
- Be able to critically assess the costs and benefits of urban development policies
- Enhance understanding of the link between land use and transportation economics
- Strengthen a data-driven approach to solving urban problems
Organizational Impact
- Ensure public investments (e.g., transit) maximize economic return on investment
- Improve the accuracy of revenue forecasting and municipal budgeting
- Design more efficient and equitable urban tax and fee structures
- Create evidence-based economic development strategies that target high-growth sectors
- Minimize market distortions caused by inefficient regulation or subsidy programs
- Lead to more financially sustainable and resilient urban growth
Course Outline
Unit 1: The Rationale for Cities
Location Theory and Agglomeration- Defining the concepts of localization and urbanization economies
- Alfred Marshall's industrial districts and agglomeration forces
- The role of specialized labor, inputs, and knowledge spillovers
- The trade-off between agglomeration benefits and congestion costs
- Central Place Theory and the hierarchy of urban centers
- The concept of the economic base and multiplier effects
- The Monocentric City Model (MCM) and its assumptions
- Deriving the bid-rent function for different land uses
- Understanding the spatial equilibrium of housing and commuting costs
- Critiques of the MCM and the rise of the polycentric city
- Analyzing the economics of urban sprawl and its costs
- The impact of technology on urban spatial structure (e.g., telecommuting)
Unit 2: Urban Land and Housing Markets
Land Use and Valuation- Market failures in urban land use (externalities, public goods)
- The economics of land use regulation (e.g., zoning, growth controls)
- Valuation methods for urban land and real estate appraisal
- Analyzing the economic impact of historic preservation and conservation
- The concept of land banking and public land management
- The role of property taxation in influencing land use decisions
- The demand and supply of housing and market equilibrium
- Analyzing housing price bubbles and market volatility
- The economics of filtering and housing depreciation
- The rationale and impact of housing subsidies and public housing
- Inclusionary zoning and its effect on housing supply and price
- Economic analysis of rental market controls (rent stabilization)
Unit 3: Urban Transportation Economics
Pricing and Investment- The economics of congestion and the optimal congestion toll
- Cost-benefit analysis of transportation infrastructure projects
- Economic rationale for public transit subsidies
- Analyzing the impact of parking policy on traffic and land use
- Financing transportation: user fees, taxes, and private investment
- The economic effects of high-speed rail and intercity connectivity
- The value of travel time savings and its measurement
- The impact of accessibility on property values (Hedonic Pricing)
- Economic analysis of Transit-Oriented Development (TOD)
- The shift to shared mobility and its economic implications
- Evaluating the costs and benefits of active transportation infrastructure
- The economic geography of logistics and freight movement
Unit 4: Local Public Finance and Policy
Municipal Finance- The optimal structure of local taxation (property, sales, income)
- Tiebout Hypothesis and the role of local jurisdiction competition
- The economics of intergovernmental grants and revenue sharing
- Analysis of municipal debt, bonds, and capital improvement funding
- Cost-benefit analysis for public services provision (e.g., police, fire)
- Fiscal impact analysis of new development projects
- The economic rationale for government intervention (market failure)
- Evaluation of economic incentives (tax abatements, TIF)
- The economics of enterprise zones and place-based policies
- Analyzing cluster development and industry specialization strategies
- The role of universities and anchor institutions in local economic growth
- Measuring the effectiveness and return on investment of economic development programs
Unit 5: Urban Problems and Equity
Poverty and Inequality- Economic theories of urban poverty and its spatial concentration
- Analyzing the intergenerational transmission of poverty
- The economics of minimum wage and job training programs in cities
- Spatial mismatch hypothesis and its role in unemployment
- Economic analysis of anti-discrimination policies in housing and labor
- The role of income inequality in affecting urban quality of life
- The economic costs of air and water pollution in urban areas
- Coase Theorem and the bargaining solution to externalities
- The economics of noise, crime, and public safety
- Using regulatory and market-based solutions (e.g., cap-and-trade)
- Economic analysis of congestion and crime reduction strategies
- Valuing non-market goods: the economic value of parks and open space
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