City economics

書誌事項

City economics

Brendan O'Flaherty

Harvard University Press, 2005

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This introductory but innovative textbook on the economics of cities is aimed at students of urban and regional policy as well as of undergraduate economics. It deals with standard topics, including automobiles, mass transit, pollution, housing, and education but it also discusses non-standard topics such as segregation, water supply, sewers, garbage, fire prevention, housing codes, homelessness, crime, illicit drugs, and economic development. Its methods of analysis are primarily verbal, geometric, and arithmetic. The author achieves coherence by showing how the analysis of various topics reinforces one another. Thus, buses can tell us something about schools and optimal tolls about land prices. Brendan O'Flaherty looks at almost everything through the lens of Pareto optimality and potential Pareto optimality--how policies affect people and their well-being, not abstract entities such as cities or the economy or growth or the environment. Such traditionalism leads to radical questions, however: Should cities have police and fire departments? Should tax preferences for home ownership be repealed? Should public schools charge for their services? O'Flaherty also gives serious consideration to such heterodox policies as pay-at-the-pump auto insurance, curb rights for buses, land taxes, marginal cost water pricing, and sidewalk zoning.

目次

Preface Acknowledgments 1. Introduction 2. Why Proximity Is Good 3. Cars, Pollution, and Accidents 4. Congestion 5. Mass Transit 6. Land 7. Too Many Cars? Too Much Lawn? Too Much Blight? 8. Rules 9. Water, Sewers, Fire, and Garbage 10. Education 11. Race and Space 12. Race and Policy 13. Housing: The Big Picture 14. Housing and Poor People 15. Homelessness 16. Crime 17. Drugs, Guns, and Alcohol 18. Urban Economic Development 19. Epilogue Glossary Index

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