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Beyond Regional Analysis: Manufacturing Zones, Urban Employment and Spatial Inequality in China
17
Citations
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References
1999
Year
Urban EmploymentInternational EconomicsEast Asian StudiesLocal Economic DevelopmentRegional DevelopmentSocial SciencesRegional ScienceSpatial InequalityCurrent UnderstandingEconomic InequalityEconomicsRegional AnalysisGeographyRegional EconomicsUrban PlanningRegional Analysis FrameworkUrban GeographySpatial EconomicsUrban EconomicsBusinessRegional Fiscal DisparitiesRegional Integration
Current understanding of spatial inequality in China is largely informed by the regional analysis framework (RAF). The RAF is built upon the proposition that the best geographical partition of the Chinese landmass for understanding spatial inequality is a partition into three supra-provincial regions: coastal, central and western. Empirical discussion revolves around how equal the three regions are along several different outcome measures (e.g. per capita income). However, a better framework for understanding spatial inequality is the one developed by Paul Krugman, the “manufacturing zones framework” (MZF), although this framework requires theoretical elaboration to encompass the Chinese reality in a realistic manner.
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