Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World?

Two long-established stylized facts in the urban and development economics literatures are that: (a) a country's level of economic development is strongly positively correlated with its level of urbanization; and (b) a country's level of...

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Main Authors: Roberts, Mark, Blankespoor, Brian, Deuskar, Chandan, Stewart, Benjamin
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/164251490903580662/Urbanization-and-development-is-Latin-America-and-the-Caribbean-different-from-the-rest-of-the-world
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26363
id okr-10986-26363
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-263632021-06-08T14:42:48Z Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World? Roberts, Mark Blankespoor, Brian Deuskar, Chandan Stewart, Benjamin URBANIZATION STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION AGGLOMERATION INDEX ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY POPULATION CLUSTERS Two long-established stylized facts in the urban and development economics literatures are that: (a) a country's level of economic development is strongly positively correlated with its level of urbanization; and (b) a country's level of urbanization is strongly negatively correlated with the size of its agricultural sector. However, countries in the Latin America and Caribbean region appear to depart significantly from the rest of the world in these two basic relationships. Although Latin American countries appear to be significantly more urbanized than predicted based on these global relationships, Caribbean countries appear significantly less urbanized. However, analyses involving cross-country comparisons of urbanization levels are undermined by systematic measurement errors arising from differences in how countries define their urban areas. This paper reexamines whether Latin America and Caribbean countries differ from the rest of the world in the basic stylized facts of urbanization, development, and structural transformation. The analysis makes use of two alternative methodologies for the consistent definition of urban areas across countries: the Agglomeration Index methodology and a methodology based on the identification of dense spatially contiguous clusters of population. Both methodologies rely on globally gridded population data sets as input. There exist several such data sets, and so the paper also assesses the robustness of the findings to the choice of input population layer. 2017-04-13T18:52:01Z 2017-04-13T18:52:01Z 2017-03-03 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/164251490903580662/Urbanization-and-development-is-Latin-America-and-the-Caribbean-different-from-the-rest-of-the-world http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26363 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8019 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Latin America & Caribbean Caribbean Latin America
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic URBANIZATION
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
AGGLOMERATION INDEX
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
POPULATION CLUSTERS
spellingShingle URBANIZATION
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
AGGLOMERATION INDEX
ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
POPULATION CLUSTERS
Roberts, Mark
Blankespoor, Brian
Deuskar, Chandan
Stewart, Benjamin
Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World?
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
Caribbean
Latin America
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8019
description Two long-established stylized facts in the urban and development economics literatures are that: (a) a country's level of economic development is strongly positively correlated with its level of urbanization; and (b) a country's level of urbanization is strongly negatively correlated with the size of its agricultural sector. However, countries in the Latin America and Caribbean region appear to depart significantly from the rest of the world in these two basic relationships. Although Latin American countries appear to be significantly more urbanized than predicted based on these global relationships, Caribbean countries appear significantly less urbanized. However, analyses involving cross-country comparisons of urbanization levels are undermined by systematic measurement errors arising from differences in how countries define their urban areas. This paper reexamines whether Latin America and Caribbean countries differ from the rest of the world in the basic stylized facts of urbanization, development, and structural transformation. The analysis makes use of two alternative methodologies for the consistent definition of urban areas across countries: the Agglomeration Index methodology and a methodology based on the identification of dense spatially contiguous clusters of population. Both methodologies rely on globally gridded population data sets as input. There exist several such data sets, and so the paper also assesses the robustness of the findings to the choice of input population layer.
format Working Paper
author Roberts, Mark
Blankespoor, Brian
Deuskar, Chandan
Stewart, Benjamin
author_facet Roberts, Mark
Blankespoor, Brian
Deuskar, Chandan
Stewart, Benjamin
author_sort Roberts, Mark
title Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World?
title_short Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World?
title_full Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World?
title_fullStr Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World?
title_full_unstemmed Urbanization and Development : Is Latin America and the Caribbean Different from the Rest of the World?
title_sort urbanization and development : is latin america and the caribbean different from the rest of the world?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/164251490903580662/Urbanization-and-development-is-Latin-America-and-the-Caribbean-different-from-the-rest-of-the-world
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26363
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