An empirical analysis of competing explanations of urban primacy: Evidence from Asia and the Americas
Ronald Moomaw and
Mohammed A. Alwosabi
No B 19-2003, ZEI Working Papers from University of Bonn, ZEI - Center for European Integration Studies
Abstract:
This paper tests the relationship between primacy and economic development for countries in Asia and the Americas. It tests explanations for primacy drawn from several social-science disciplines--demography, economics, geography, political science, and sociology. The study is one of the first to use panel-data estimators for the tests. Economic and domestic political variables are found to be important determinants of primacy. In particular, rent-seeking and dictatorial governments are associated with primacy, but the association exists independent of the level of economic development. The implication from dependency and world-system theories that current international economic interactions promote primacy is not supported. It also examines the hypothesis that primacy first increases and then decreases with GDP per capita.
Date: 2003
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Journal Article: An empirical analysis of competing explanations of urban primacy evidence from Asia and the Americas (2004) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:zbw:zeiwps:b192003
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