The seventh edition of "Urban Economics" continues to be the market leading textbook due to its thorough content and concise writing style. The new edition continues to cover urban economics as the discipline that lies at the intersection of geography and economics. "Urban Economics" incorporates the remarkable progress in the field of urban economics from the last fifteen years. It also explores the location decisions of utility-maximizing households and profit-maximizing firms, and it shows how these decisions cause the formation of cities of different size and shape.
The framework of this edition continues to be divided into six sections. Part I explains why cities exist and what causes hem to grow or shrink. Part II examines the market forces that shape cities and the role of government in determining land-use patterns. Part III looks at the urban transportation system. Part IV uses a model of the rational criminal to explore the causes of urban crime and its spatial consequences. Part V explains the unique features of the housing market and examines the effects of government housing policies. Part VI explains the rationale for our fragmented system of local government and explores the responses of local governments to intergovernmental grants and the responses of taxpayers to local taxes.
Chapter 1 Introduction and Axioms of Urban Economics
Part 1 Market Forces in the Development of Cities
Chapter 2 Why Do Cities Exist?
Chapter 3 Why Do Firms Cluster?
Chapter 4 City Size
Chapter 5 Urban Growth
Part II Land Rent and Land-Use Patterns
Chapter 6 Urban Land Rent
Chapter 7 Land-Use Patterns
Chapter 8 Neighborhood Choice
Chapter 9 Zoning and Growth Controls
Part III
Chapter 10 Externalities from Autos
Chapter 11 Mass Transit
Part IV
Chapter 12 Crime
Part V
Chapter 13 Why Is Housing Different?
Chapter 14 Housing Policy
Part VI
Chapter 15 The Role of Local Goverment
Chapter 16 Local Goverment Revenue
Appendix Tools of Microeconomics
Index