Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
By and large, geographers have had little to say about the World Bank's annual flagship World Development Reports (WDRs). However, with the just published WDR 2009 (hereafter referred to as the Report), things might be different, for it claims to be concerned with nothing less than ‘reshaping economic geography’. In his foreword, the President of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, writes that he expects ‘Reshaping Economic Geography will stimulate a much-needed discussion on the desirability of “balanced growth”, which has proved elusive. And by informing some important policy debates, it will point the way towards a more inclusive and sustainable development’ (World Bank 2009, xiii). On the face of it, many geographers will welcome the Report, not least because it takes issues of space seriously: ‘This Report advances the influence of geography on economic opportunity by elevating space and place from mere undercurrents in policy to a major focus’ (World Bank 2009, 2). Placing the spatial dimensions of economic development centre stage, and recognising the reality and importance of spatial unevenness in development potentials and outcomes, may be reassuring. However, this welcome should perhaps be tempered by a concern for how an institution dominated by economists might handle geography. To put it another way, how does the World Bank – in the guise of this Report –‘do’ geography? What does it say, who does it cite, what does it omit – and does all this make any difference? The Report focuses on the spatial transformations that must happen for countries to develop. Cities, migration and trade, it is claimed, have been the main catalysts of progress and hence ‘Growing cities, ever more mobile people, and increasingly specialised products are ... essential for economic success’ (World Bank 2009, xx). These greater densities, shorter distances and reduced divisions will, the Report argues, bring about unbalanced growth: however, over time, other policies and mechanisms for integration will foster convergence in living standards. Development, seen through the Report's eyes, involves a necessary (and welcome) spatial unevenness in economic activity coupled with progressive spatial evenness in human welfare. This view is both positive (in that it reflects the way the Report reads economic history) and normative (in that the Report argues that this is how things should be). The key policy challenge is to accelerate economic divergence while reducing the time taken for welfare convergence. A clear set of organising principles runs through the Report from beginning to end. The notion of ‘Development in 3-D’, meaning the intersection of Density, Distance and Division, lies at the heart of the conceptual framework laid out in Part One of the Report (with each ‘D’ the topic of a separate chapter). These three dimensions of development ‘are easy metaphors, since density, distance, and division summon images of human, physical, and political geography’ (World Bank 2009, 6). The Report claims that by promoting transformations along these three dimensions, some places are doing well. Higher densities due to urbanisation, shorter distances as people and businesses move to cities, and fewer divisions as economic borders are thinned and world markets entered, are ‘the changes that will help developing nations’ (World Bank 2009, xx). Corresponding to these three dimensions (referred to as ‘facts’) are three drivers of change: agglomeration, migration and specialisation with trade. Part Two of the Report, more descriptive in tone, dedicates a chapter to the transformations affected by each of these drivers. These drivers in turn define three corresponding domains for policy: urbanisation, territorial development and regional integration, the themes of Part Three. Structuring the Report around these groups of three has the effect, the authors suggest, that it can be read ‘by part or policy’. The reader interested in concepts can read just Part one, while people interested in agglomeration can read the Report ‘vertically’, looking only at the chapters on Density, Agglomeration and Scale Economies and Urbanisation policies. Whilst this clear structure is helpful to the reader, the continuous use of tripartite divisions throughout the Report gives the impression that the desire for simplicity of structure may be obscuring complexity of experience and, therefore, is rather suspect. In terms of policy responses, density is seen to operate most powerfully at the local level, distance is the most critical dimension at the national level, and division is the most important dimension at the international level. Governments can intervene to reduce spatial disparities through three types of instrument: institutions (which should be spatially blind and universal in coverage), infrastructure (to drive spatial connection) and incentives (which are spatially targeted interventions). The preference is for policies to focus on spatially blind institutional interventions. Consistent with recent trends in multilateral lending, the Report is also supportive of infrastructural investments. It is most diffident about spatially targeted interventions to foster economic activity on the grounds that historically they have failed to offset tendencies toward economic concentration. The Report is packed full of examples drawn from across the world and, unlike many preceding WDRs, this one is particularly concerned to draw inspiration from advanced as well as developing economies. This approach to the use of example has two consequences. It allows the authors to put their stylised facts and 3-D structure ‘in place’– indeed, they claim that ‘Place is the most important correlate of a person's welfare’ (World Bank 2009, 1). Second, it gives the Report a vaguely evolutionist feel. It is hard to escape the sense that, in the final instance, the experiences of the US and (to a lesser extent) Europe and contemporary China offer models from which the rest of the world ought to learn. Thus one encounters sections entitled ‘Overcoming distance in North America’ (pp. 45–6), ‘Overcoming division in Western Europe’ (pp. 122–4), and ‘Distance and division in East Asia’ (pp. 194–6), which are positive in tone and therefore become exemplar experiences. The African regional vignette, by contrast, highlights multiple disadvantages: Sub-Saharan Africa today suffers from the triple disadvantages of low density, long distance, and deep division that put the continent at a developmental disadvantage. These spatial dimensions reduce proximity between economic agents within Sub-Saharan Africa, and between Africa and the rest of the world. ‘Cumulative causation’ between these forces catches many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa in a ‘proximity trap’. (World Bank 2009, 283) The Report purports to re-energise geography's place in understanding economic and human development. In this section we reflect on the literatures that are cited in the Report, the approach that is taken and the evidence that is deployed to make the case. What, in other words, is the disciplinary span, the historical reach and the evidential substance of the Report? The main perspective adopted in the Report derives from the relatively new and growing body of literature known as ‘new economic geography’. The inspiration for this literature is not the discipline of geography. Economists’ theoretical constructs have avoided reference to existing economic geography. Instead they have theorised agglomeration with the intention of revising neo-classical equilibrium models to take scale into account. New economic geography theorists see their initiative as a major contribution to economics as a discipline by helping to resolve the distortions of market imperfections that have plagued modelling exercises. Scale, it is believed, adds complexity and most importantly realism to their analyses. This view has been validated by the award of a Nobel prize to Paul Krugman this year for his pioneering work in new economic geography. Few geographers would claim to be the fount of all wisdom on the spatial dimensions of development, but one would have thought that the discipline had something relevant to say as well. Yet this report cites scarcely any geographers – neither those early analysts of the relationships between space, economy and society, nor subsequent critics and innovators. Consider some of the more startling gaps. There is considerable discussion of the role of secondary urban centres in the Report but no mention of Dennis Rondinelli's work on secondary cities and area development. Much play is made in Chapter 7 on the possibility of fostering ‘Concentration without congestion’, but no reference is made to Terry McGee's pioneering work on extended metropolitan regions in Asia. Tracking back in time, a geographer might also have expected some reference to early work on spatial location such as that by Peter Haggett,2 Peter Gould or Dick Chorley, to name just three. All this is absent. Even more remarkably, Gunner Myrdal's work on circular and cumulative causation (despite circular causation being one of the Report's ‘stylized facts’) is ignored, as too is Michael Lipton's work on urban bias, and all the literature by earlier development economists and others that followed his key contribution. Among more recent authors, Doreen Massey's sustained, critical (but also practically engaged) interpretations of regional inequality and policy merit no comment. Nor will one find here serious engagement with the work of Allen Scott, Peter Dicken, or any number of geographers3 who have a great deal to say about the issues addressed in the Report, and whose work can hardly be dismissed as irrelevant to policy, or as unduly critical of orthodox institutions. As a result, the Report appears, to geographers at least, academically narrow and historically shallow. It gives the impression that scholarship on economic geography began in the last decade or so. The result is that at times ‘old’ issues and debates are presented as ‘new’ insights (cf. Martin 2008). This, in turn, means that the evolution of scholarship and understanding has been underplayed in general, and often overlooked entirely. Had the authors of the Report taken the time to read these geographical and historical literatures and cast their net more widely, they could have made some of the discussion both stronger and more nuanced. The Report's enthusiastic discovery of central place theory could, for instance, have been tempered by the longstanding professional experience of previous agglomeration modellers from geography who know all too well the complexities of urban growth and welfare. More generally, the Report would have been less mechanical in of the between space, economic activity and welfare it would have in the of spatial it would at a the of economic activity and and it would have the many between economy and on some of these one might say that the of and the of geographers from the that the Report as well as the and reflects to as as the Report's to This may be but can be from both and this WDR little at the Report for spatially blind institutions to foster density, reduce distance and authors have a view of the world that has the effect, in disciplinary of distance and A concern we have to the way in which is and evidence in the The of towards and at times and regions are into is overlooked in the of the that the Report constructs and There may be examples drawn from around the but they are and to the are not The Report and As just two the policy of this Report (World Development 2009, the policy of this Report (World Development 2009, Yet such more since the reality of is for in urban is no to about are important between across the and to that might be so. More generally, the Report little understanding of the that it to make case. This is for two space, distance and division are out of examples are not as from which to but rather as examples from which can be realism and all the work since the to the of spatial relationships and the of geography and political economy might as well not have for this Report for and and Second, is the Report in a one of authors such as In is for that vaguely or critical is as an This is for the World Bank, for work has affected earlier the of the that to and experiences of being and had a on the WDR on (World Bank In that this Report reflects the to which relatively orthodox economists are more in the Bank a decade of about development, perhaps in the over the which to the of the The of how evidence is and are in the Report's of There to be a deal of a division lies at the heart of the the Report is in any of relationships between by the time the discussion to at of of are drawn at such a scale that they as as they such as the of from to urban is while the of and the of the as a to be seen as mere rather than a critical in the of spatial their level, the that the Report while taken too become or into As just one in the Report's final chapter the world is into three types of which are into three types of developing are countries in regions to world are countries in regions with from world while are countries in regions from world markets and without a This means that within the we have one of the most countries and one of the least This to a discussion of the for countries of each are as by what they omit as by what they say, and this is with this A number of serious the Report's central and policy In this section we focus on the Report's of and of and and of The most important in the Report, to in a in the chapter entitled this report is not To the Report important of the spatial transformations not the they would in a The main not – or the most important – are the and of a economic geography. (World Bank 2009, in This is on the that this is an in economic geography and therefore such can be Yet these about both the of the Report's as well as with the Bank's of On the Report argues that human must be as in growth This is central to the in which the Report argues for the of agglomeration, with the to human the greater the of human This allows the report to as that draw to the of urban migration and therefore about on growth and one human must be to growth how can it be to say that and should be as and that the and should each be to the domains of rather than of in understanding of Second, how can it be for the flagship report of the World Bank, which has as for a world of to a report of that the and and of the and policies that it and What is all the more is that the Report to be concerned with the way towards a more inclusive and that can be without too time the and of the geographers have to space, to move from to inclusive the between and has become a place of and with people with space in than and the of or people, as the Report to and others about some people are mobile and others are on how the of and for and and and discipline has been for with how experience of in in or to urban centres back to the of and the meaning of to these urban This in the of in and the of as urban just some such work in see and The Report, however, has on of these debates and place as a mere to space, with the result that is as a and, to a is a economic activity or does The focus of the Report is on the of spatial it does not to the to those take in terms of their and for people and More it means that in the Report is no of debates that we would as not but central to an understanding of spatial transformations and their and of and are from the is no discussion of the role of dimensions in economic and spatial is no to at how space, economic activity and is little on the of and is nothing on issues and how they in spatially these as major – blind that because of the way that of evidence and approach are over The Report's ‘new how to welfare in is that development policies should with and the discussion of spatially targeted incentives should (World Bank 2009, density and human towards such centres of density in this the of economic geography There are here of the people in the regions of the to on and to regions with greater economic because it a of and a of regional and a for markets to resolve of regional In for in markets to offset regional and the and of such the Report to the to the for targeted to foster economic activity at targeted spatial interventions are presented only as a final policy and are as in economic rather than to to geographical Consider just two of the at work in the some institutions may be spatially all are and the Report over this of institutions. As a result, just as too are the the Report for instance, markets in in to help people their and have the to their to centres of To about the meaning in such policy and in the that they might have is not just a concern for and in the to foster policies to those that the Report it a by that of economic and the to back blind institutional out of can to policy Second, while the Report does more to than to issues and the the political to be seen as a to spatial and integration, rather than as a for spatial interventions. 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Rigg et al. (Sat,) studied this question.