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World cities

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World cities Dominance and dependence Changing role of regional centres Demise of the small town Dominance and dependence The relationship of dominance and dependence ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: World cities


1
World cities
  • Dominance and dependence
  • Changing role of regional centres
  • Demise of the small town

2
Dominance and dependence
  • The relationship of dominance and dependence
    could be said to belong to the interaction
    between world cities and the other urban centres
    in proximity to them.
  • World cities, whether they be characterised as
    dominant, major or secondary, are sites of world
    accumulation.

3
Dominance and dependence
  • Technological dominance and innovation
  • Financial dominance in the production and
    distribution of goods and services on a global
    scale.
  • The cultural influence that arises from world
    cities is widespread, as is the level of
    strategic decision making.

4
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5
Dominance and dependence
  • Urban centres on the other hand, have functions
    that show dependence on the world cities.
  • Accumulation and the production and distribution
    is only on the national scale
  • Technology is often adopted, as there is a
    relatively lower degree of research and
    development.
  • A limited cultural influence with some political
    control.
  • Eg Perths financial system is dependent on
    Sydney Head Offices.

6
Dominance and dependence
  • The hierarchy of world cities indicates that
    there is a level of dominance emulating from New
    York, London, Paris and Tokyo over the other
    world cities.
  • They have a disproportionate concentration of
    top-level headquarters of the financial,
    industrial, commercial and producer service
    sectors.
  • Many of the large industrial TNCs that account
    for nearly 70 of the international trade are
    headquartered in these cities.

7
Dominance and dependence
  • The massive expansion of the global financial
    industry over the last 20 years has greatly
    increased the global significance of London, New
    York and Tokyo.
  • The main financial transactions in shares, bonds,
    loans and foreign currency are dominated by these
    three cities.
  • Together with Los Angeles, Frankfurt and Hong
    Kong they provide a 24-hours-a-day global
    coverage of financial transactions.

8
Dominance and dependence
  • Dominance and dependence also exists between
    world cities and other urban centres.
  • An example of this is Sydneys role in contrast
    to the other Australian cities.
  • Sydney, as a major world city has 27 head office
    locations for Australias 50 largest
    corporations.

9
Dominance and dependence
  • Melbourne comprises 16 of these, while Brisbane,
    Perth and Adelaide have less than three in their
    respective cities.
  • Sydney is the principal centre for smaller,
    Australian-controlled businesses.
  • Nearly half of these have grown through national
    mergers and takeovers.

10
Dominance and dependence
  • Sydney is the principal financial centre as
    countries like Japan prefer to locate trading,
    marketing and financial companies there.
  • Although Melbourne dominates in the areas of
    manufacturing and mining, Sydney is the dominant
    link to the global economy as it represents a
    more recent period of capital accumulation
    associated with economic globalisation,
    especially in the financial sector.

11
Dominance and dependence
  • The other urban centres that are also state
    capitals only play minor roles in national
    production let alone global accumulation.
  • Cities like Brisbane, Darwin, Adelaide, Hobart,
    and Perth have functions that have been largely
    absorbed into Sydney and to a lesser extent
    Melbourne through corporate takeovers.
  • These urban centres operate at an intrastate
    level of networking within Australias federal
    administrative structure.
  • Further dominance would be exerted from Sydney
    over nearby urban centres like Newcastle and
    Wollongong.
  • These relationships of dominance and dependence
    occur on a global scale and these roles are even
    more pronounced when the country has a greater
    number of urban centres and world cities that
    surround a dominant world city.

12
Dominance and dependence
  • The United States presents clear trends of
    dominance and dependence whereby New York, with a
    group of world cities dependent on it, especially
    for financial transactions.
  • Major world cities include Chicago, San
    Francisco, Miami, Boston and Los Angeles.
    Clustered around these world cities are the urban
    centres that have dependent relationships with
    their nearby world cities.
  • In the case of Chicago, dependent urban places in
    close proximity include Minneapolis, Milwaukee,
    Indianapolis, St. Louis and Kansas City.

13
Dominance and dependence
  • The United Kingdom London acts as a centre of
    dependence for other major cities across the
    nation especially for financial transactions.
  • Cities such as Birmingham, Newcastle and
    Manchester rely on London for a variety of needs
    and allow them to subsequently be linked into the
    global network.
  • Clustered around these major cities are the urban
    centers that have dependent relationship with
    their closest major city. Eg Manchester -
    dependent urban places in close proximity include
    Liverpool, Chester, Preston and Stockport.

14
Rural trends
  • There have been changes in the relative
    significance of settlements in rural areas at a
    regional and local level.
  • Overall, countries like Canada, the United States
    and Australia have witnessed the growth of
    regional centres with a corresponding decline in
    population and economic activity throughout the
    surrounding small towns.

15
Urban systems / metropolitan areas
  • Urban systems comprise of the national city (eg.
    Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne) that have a
    complex set of functions.
  • These include wholesaling, retailing,
    manufacturing, finance and corporate management,
    education, entertainment and health services.
  • Metropolitan areas perform these functions for
    smaller urban places and rural areas in their
    general vicinity.
  • These metropolitan hinterlands vary greatly in
    size and shape depending on the type of services
    provided.

16
Regional centres
  • Further down the hierarchy are regional centres.
  • In New South Wales, regional centres are defined
    as having populations of 11,000 to about 50,000.
  • These centres perform a smaller amount of
    functions and these relate closely to the
    functions of each settlement.
  • In the case of Sydney, regional centres would
    include Newcastle, Wollongong, Bathurst, Lismore,
    Tamworth and Dubbo.

17
Small towns
  • Below these in the hierarchy are the small
    hinterland towns with populations of less than
    11,000 people.
  • Taking the regional centre of Dubbo, among the
    many small hinterland towns would be Wellington,
    Nyngan, Bourke, Warren, Peak Hill and Dunedoo.

18
Growth and decline
  • The trends of growth and decline are evident in
    the Dubbo districts population changes.
  • From the period 1976 to 1997, the Dubbo district
    grew by 56.5, while Wellington and Warren
    decreased by 9.0 and 17.4 respectively over the
    same period.

19
Growth and decline
  • The population of Dubbo grew from 28,064 to
    30,102 between 1991 and 1996 and in 2003 grew
    again to reach 38,937 while Wellington went from
    8648 in 1996 to 8142 in 2004 and Warren from
    1,909 to 1786 over the same period.
  • The same decline may be said for Bourke, Dunedoo
    and Nyngan.

20
Question
  • Why do you think small towns are in decline while
    regional centres increase?

21
Reasons for small town decline
  • An account of these trends can be attributed to a
    complex set of factors that differ in each
    region.
  • However, a common range of causes may begin with
    the recent developments in transport and
    communications making it difficult for small
    towns to survive.
  • Business services are more centralised and this
    has cascaded through the whole urban system from
    the national to the local levels.

22
Reasons for small town decline
  • For example, the widespread use of cars and the
    construction of sealed roads after 1960 in Dubbo
    has made it easier for people to travel longer
    distances to purchase from a wider variety of
    cheaper goods and services from regional centres
    instead of the local small town.
  • A similar effect is in the rapid development in
    telecommunications (eg. e-commerce) and the
    possibility for people in rural areas to purchase
    goods globally.

23
Reasons for small town decline
  • The result at the local level is the decline,
    demise even of towns, and certainly a marked
    reduction in services that are no longer economic
    in a competitive business environment.
  • Regional centres absorb the decline in the
    population and activities of the smaller local
    centres.

24
Reasons for small town decline
  • The economic restructuring in both the private
    and public sector has allowed the regional
    centres to become increasingly competitive in the
    primary and secondary industries (eg. food
    processing and the supply of frozen meat).
  • This is not just on the national scale but also
    on the world market in terms of exporting
    success.
  • The encouragement of economies of scale through
    lower operating and land costs has seen many
    businesses prosper in centres like Wagga Wagga.

25
Reasons for small town decline
  • Retailing has also restructured with the growth
    of large regional shopping centres to the demise
    of the local, small town retailer.
  • Public restructuring and the adoption of economic
    rationalism as a result of fiscal restraint have
    seen the rationalisation and centralisation of
    government services in the regional centres.

26
Reasons for small town decline
  • It is well known that returns on agricultural
    production have reduced rural incomes relative to
    those families from the cities.
  • As a result, some 431 centres with populations
    less than 4,000 will struggle to survive.
  • Many of these towns are losing the infrastructure
    necessary to maintain a viable community.
  • Drought has also been a major push factor from
    small towns.

27
Reasons for small town decline
  • Between 1981 and 1998, more than a quarter of the
    bank branches in rural NSW were closed.
  • More recently the ABC reported last year that St
    George has planned to close up to 84 of its
    rural banking over the counter firms.

28
Responses
  • One response has been the development of Elders
    rural bank has now establish 400 over the counter
    branches in 3 years and over 200 through Bendigo
    Bank across Australia.
  • At a joint conference in Adelaide between
    government officials and representatives of Rural
    Bank, Senator Chapman announced the success of
    both Elders Rural and Bendigo Bank in assisting
    with the development of community services and
    infrastructure in small rural towns.

29
Responses
  • Another response to decline by communities and
    local councils is the diversification in the
    economic base of the small town.
  • The Carrathool Shire Region has towns like Leeton
    and Ivanhoe and these have actively invested in
    infrastructure that would further promote
    tourism, especially Japanese tourists who seek a
    rural setting.
  • The income from tourism helps to act as a safety
    net during periods of poor agricultural returns.
  • This approach is important as thousands of jobs
    in agriculture are lost each year.
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