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New York University - ECON UA

Business Dec 03, 2020

New York University - ECON UA.31 

 

 

 

Urban Economics

 

Problem Set #3 due Tuesday, Apr 5, in class

 

 

  1. The third largest city of a country has a population of 2.5 million. Using the ranksize rule, what is the population of the 10th largest city? 

 

 

 

 

  1. Assume an urban cluster’s income (I) is given by the function I=4N, where N denotes the cluster’s population in million. The cluster’s diseconomies of aggregation (C) are given by C=0.5N2
    1. Calculate the city’s utility maximizing population. 
    2. At this population, how large is the resulting utility? 
    3. Calculate the resulting utility if the population were on million higher and one million lower than the optimum. 

 

 

  1. Assume the utility functions for two cities are identical and are given by  U=N - 0.1*N2, where N denotes the city’s population in million. 
    1. What is each city’s utility maximizing population?
    2. If each city had a population of 6.5 million people, how would these cities change their size? Assuming that the total population of 13 million cannot be changed, would there be a smaller and a larger city? Would there be three or more cities? Or would there be no change at all. Explain.  

 

Expert Solution

 

 

 

 

Urban Economics

 

Problem Set #3 due Tuesday, Apr 5, in class

 

 

  1. The third largest city of a country has a population of 2.5 million. Using the ranksize rule, what is the population of the 10th largest city? 

 

 

Answer: The rank-size rule states that Ni=C/Ri, where N=population and R=rank of the ith city. C is a constant, i.e., the population of the largest city.

If the third largest city has a population of 2.5m, the largest one has 7.5m. Thus, the 10th largest city has a population of 0.75m. 

 

 

  1. Assume an urban cluster’s income (I) is given by the function I=4N, where N denotes the cluster’s population in million. The cluster’s diseconomies of aggregation (C) are given by C=0.5N2
    1. Calculate the city’s utility maximizing population. 
    2. At this population, how large is the resulting utility? 
    3. Calculate the resulting utility if the population were on million higher and one million lower than the optimum. 

 

Answer: 

    1. if I=4N        à MI=4

      if C=0.5N2   à MC=N

                              MI=MC  à N=4

       

    1. at N=4 à I=16 and C=8 à U=I-C=8 (c)            at N=5 à I=20 and C=12.5 à U=7.5

            at N=3 à I=12 and C=4.5 à U=7.5

 

  1. Assume the utility functions for two cities are identical and are given by  U=N - 0.1*N2, where N denotes the city’s population in million. 
    1. What is each city’s utility maximizing population?
    2. If each city had a population of 6.5 million people, how would these cities change their size? Assuming that the total population of 13 million cannot be changed, would there be a smaller and a larger city? Would there be three or more cities? Or would there be no change at all. Explain.  

 

Answers: 

    1. set MU equal to zero and solve for N

MU=1-0.2N=0   à 0.2N=1 à N=5

    1. A population of 6.5m is well above the utility maximizing population for each city. Nevertheless, the outcome is a stable equilibrium and there won’t be any change. The reasoning is the following. The first person that moves away from

 

one of the cities will experience a loss in utility and will move right back.

  

 

 

(4)

 

Correct or

 

false? Do not explain

 

(

a) The K=6 principle of the Central Place Theory is reflected in the hexagonal

market form (“hexa” in Greek means 6).

FALSE

 

(

b) In the K=3 principle of the Central Place Theory suggests that each central

place serves exactly its own

 

market plus 3 markets of adjacent cities.

FALSE

 

(

c) In the K=4 principle of the Central Place Theory suggests that each central

place serves exactly its own market plus 3 markets of adjacent cities.

CORRECT

 

 

 

(5)

 

Innovation and Growth:

 

Suppose a region’s work

force of 14 million is initially split equally between two

cities, X and Y. The urban utility curve peaks at 4 million workers, and beyond

that point the slope is constantly

-

$3 per million workers. The initial equilibrium

utility is $60.  Suppose city X e

xperiences technological innovation that shifts its

utility curve upward by $12.

 

(

a) Draw a pair of utility curves, one for X and one for Y, and label the positions

immediately after the innovation (before any migration) as

x

 

for city X and

y

 

for

city Y. U

se arrows along the curves to indicate that migration that follows. Show

the long

-

run equilibrium using

x’

 

and

y’

 

respectively.

 

(

b) For the new equilibrium (after migration) calculate the utility and the

population in each city.

 

 

(

a) In the Figure below,

both cities start at

i

. X, the innovative city, then moves to

j

. However it cannot maintain the utility gain since people from the Y move to X.

At the end, utility in X will fall from

j

 

to

b

, and utility in Y will grow from

i

 

to

s

.

 

 

 

 

 

(

b) new utility is

$66, the populations are 9 million (X) and 5 million (Y)

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