TY - UNPB
T1 - Urban growth and decline in Europe
AU - Bosker, E.M.
AU - Marlet, G.A.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - In this paper we examine growth differences between European cities. We have used the
Urban Audit, a rather new dataset from Eurostat. After clarifying the merits of this dataset
as well as some of its limitations, we provide some detailed characteristics of city growth in
the European Union. This shows that urban growth in the EU is pretty persistent and is
still, in spite of further European integration, largely driven by growth of national born
population; non-national European born and non-European born migrants contribute only
marginally to urban growth differentials. Moreover differences in birth rates explain a
substantial part of the variation in (national-born population) growth rates. Controlling for
these differences in birth rates, we look for the determinants of migration-driven European
city growth relative to average city growth in the EU as a whole as well as to average
national city growth, meanwhile distinguishing between national, non-national EU and non-
EU population growth. Our results suggest that, by and large, the smaller, less dense,
safer, amenity-rich cities with high levels of GDP per capita are growing fastest. When
focussing on national, EU and non-EU population growth, we moreover find that nationals
are attracted to the less dense, amenity-rich, more productive cities; that EU nonnationals
are concentrated in cities with high levels of human capital; and that non-EU
population growth is determined by climate and by employment structure.
AB - In this paper we examine growth differences between European cities. We have used the
Urban Audit, a rather new dataset from Eurostat. After clarifying the merits of this dataset
as well as some of its limitations, we provide some detailed characteristics of city growth in
the European Union. This shows that urban growth in the EU is pretty persistent and is
still, in spite of further European integration, largely driven by growth of national born
population; non-national European born and non-European born migrants contribute only
marginally to urban growth differentials. Moreover differences in birth rates explain a
substantial part of the variation in (national-born population) growth rates. Controlling for
these differences in birth rates, we look for the determinants of migration-driven European
city growth relative to average city growth in the EU as a whole as well as to average
national city growth, meanwhile distinguishing between national, non-national EU and non-
EU population growth. Our results suggest that, by and large, the smaller, less dense,
safer, amenity-rich cities with high levels of GDP per capita are growing fastest. When
focussing on national, EU and non-EU population growth, we moreover find that nationals
are attracted to the less dense, amenity-rich, more productive cities; that EU nonnationals
are concentrated in cities with high levels of human capital; and that non-EU
population growth is determined by climate and by employment structure.
KW - European urban growth
M3 - Working paper
T3 - Discussion Paper Series / Tjalling C. Koopmans Research Institute
BT - Urban growth and decline in Europe
PB - UU USE Tjalling C. Koopmans Research Institute
CY - Utrecht
ER -