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Rethinldng Urban Policy
Urban Development in an Advanced Economy
Royce Hanson, Editor
Committee on National Urban Policy
Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education
National Research Council
NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS
Washington, D.C. 1983
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National Academy Press ~ 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW ~ Washington, DC 20418
NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of
the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National
Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The
members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences
and with regard for appropriate balance.
This report has been reviewed by a group other than the authors according to procedures approved
by a Report Review Committee consisting of members of the National Academy of Sciences,
the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine.
The National Research Council was established by the National Academy of Sciences in 1916
to associate the broad community of science and technology with the Academy's purposes of
furthering knowledge and of advising the federal government. The Council operates in accordance
with general policies determined by the Academy under the authority of its congressional charter
of 1863, which establishes the Academy as a private, nonprofit, self-governing membership
corporation. The Council has become the principal operating agency of both the National Acad-
emy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering in the conduct of their services to
the government, the public, and the scientific and engineering communities. It is administered
jointly by both Academies and the Institute of Medicine. The National Academy of Engineering
and the Institute of Medicine were estabished in 1964 and 1970, respectively, under the charter
of the National Academy of Sciences.
This project received support from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development,
the U.S. Department of Commerce, the Ford Foundation, and the German Marshall Fund of the
United States.
Cover: Computergraphics courtesy of Skidmore Owings & Merrill
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Main entry under title:
Rethinking urban policy.
. . ~
"Committee on National Urban Policy, Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and
Education, National Research Council."
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
1. Urban policy United States. 2. Urban economics United States. I. Hanson,
Royce. II. National Research Council (U.S.). Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences
and Education. Committee on National Urban Policy.
HT123.R456 1983
ISBN 0-309-03426-4
Printed in the United States of America
338.973909173'2 83-19422
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To Harvey S. Perloff (1915-1983)
scholar, educator, planner, and inspiration to those
who would make cities better places to live
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COMMITTEE ON NATIONAL URBAN POLICY
PAUL N. YLVISAKER (Chair), Graduate School of Education, Harvard
University
BRIAN J. L. BERRY, School of Urban and Public Affairs, Carnegie-
Mellon University
HARVEY BROOKS, Aiken Computation Laboratory, Harvard University
KENNETH B. CLARK, Clark, Phipps, Clark, and Harris, Inc., New York
JOHN M. DE GROVE, Joint Center for Urban and Environmental
Problems, Florida Atlantic University
JAMES M. Howell, First National Bank of Boston
HARVEY S. PER~oFF, School of Architecture and Urban Planning,
University of California, Los Angeles
GEORGE E. PETERSON, The Urban Institute, Washington, D.C.
GAIE GARFIEED SCHWARTZ, Garfield Schwartz Associates, Inc.,
Washington, D.C.
ROBERT C. WOOD, Government Department, Wesleyan University
ROYCE HANSON, study director
GORDON L. CLARK, National Research Council fellow
JOHN REES, National Research Council fellow
v
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Preface
The Committee on National Urban Policy, established by the National
Research Council (NRC) in 1981 with support from the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development, the U.S. Department of Commerce,
the Ford Foundation, and the German Marshall Fund of the United States,
was charged with responsibility for evaluating past urban policies, con-
tinuing review of current policies, examining the experiences of other
advanced nations with urban policy, and developing policy options and
recommendations for the future.
During the earliest stages of its deliberations, the committee decided
that it could contribute most to the discussion of urban policy by addressing
basic conditions or trends that seem likely to shape the future course of
urban development and raise issues that public policy must face. Tradi-
tional approaches to urban policy that deal with a series of functional
problems housing, neighborhood and commercial district deterioration,
transportation, urban poverty have often failed to produce unified and
lasting policies not because the problems are unimportant, but because
they often tend to be derivative of more fundamental social and economic
forces at work in cities and suburbs. It is also important to view urban
areas as whole economic entities rather than solely in terms of political
jurisdictions.
The first task of the committee, therefore, was to identify and describe
those fundamental issues that we believed would shape the ways in which
urban areas will develop over the next two decades and would frame the
issues with which urban policies must contend. We also believed that
. .
V11
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. . .
V111
Preface
national urban policy had to comprehend actions that could be taken at
the state and local as well as at the federal level of government. This
approach was reflected in the first major report of the committee, Critical
Issues for National Urban Policy (National Research Council, 1982a).
That report discussed five issues that will shape urban policy in the years
to come: (1) the mobility of people and jobs, (2) the rise of an urban
underclass, (3) changes in the allocation of responsibility for urban pro-
grams in the federal system, (4) changing relationships between the public
and private sectors of the economy, and (5) the condition of urban in-
frastructure. The committee has also published a background paper, "The
Evolution of National Urban Policy, 1970-1980" (Hanson, 1982), and a
report on an international conference it conducted, National Policy and
the Post-Industrial City (National Research Council, 1982b). Together
these reports laid a foundation for this study, which is concerned with
how urban policies might respond to the substantial changes that have
occurred in the structure of the national economy.
The impact of structural change on urban areas was identified at the
outset of the committee's work as perhaps the most important single issue
with which urban policy must grapple in the coming years. While various
aspects of the subject have been widely discussed particularly the prob-
lems of shifting investments from some parts of the economy to others
and of retraining the labor force to adjust to these shifts in investment-
there has been relatively little treatment of how these shifts affect the
urban areas in which the employment centers and workers are located.
Fortunately, there is growing scholarly and public interest in this matter,
and there is an expanding literature in industrial economics, technological
change, urban economics, and local labor markets from which to draw
information and insights.
Early in our deliberations we recognized the importance of the growth
of the service sector, and of changes within that sector, as crucial to our
inquiry. A small group of committee members met in May 1982 with
Thomas M. Stanback, Jr., Wilbur Thompson, Richard Knight, and Daniel
Garnick to assay the state of knowledge of services in the American
economy and to identify major policy issues. Work by Stanback and his
colleagues at the Conservation of Human Resources project at Columbia
University has been of great help to the committee in understanding both
the services as such and the ways in which urban areas are adjusting to
structural changes in their economies. The committee is also indebted to
Daniel Garnick, for help in developing useful data on these changes, and
to Richard Knight, for preparation of a special paper on transition strat-
egies. Special thanks are due to Gordon L. Clark, who, during the de-
velopment of this study, was an NRC fellow attached to the committee.
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Preface
i.
x
His several papers on urban labor markets contributed important concep-
tual and empirical support to the committee's work. His recently published
book, Interregional Migration: National Policy and Social Justice, was
initially prepared as a special issue paper for the committee and was of
great help in the preparation of Chapter 6.
Many others have contributed to the work of the committee. John Rees
who became an NRC fellow in January 1983, has made a number of
contributions to the committee's work. Judith May of the Office of Urban
Policy, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, has been
especially helpful and supportive of the committee's work. Susan Ingra-
ham, Julie Goldflies Quinn, and Kim Hong Lethi wrote background ma-
terials or special papers used to prepare this report. A number of others
read earlier versions of the report and offered helpful criticisms and com-
ments. They include Ian Dawson, Henry Doll, Eli Ginzberg, Peter Hall,
Philip Hammer, Don Hicks, Debbie Matz, Thierry Noyelle, Charles
Orlebeke, and Ralph Widner.
No report could be produced without the hard, essential, and accurate
work of the editors and administrative staff, and the committee is grateful
to members of the staff of the Commission on Behavioral and Social
Sciences and Education. Christine L. McShane edited the manuscript and
gave valuable advice on how to make the report a clearer and more effective
statement of its ideas. Diane L. Goldman, Ann G. Polvinale, and Sarah
M. Streuli prepared the original typescripts and innumerable changes and
redrafts as the report passed through its many stages. The committee also
enjoyed the consistent support of the executive director, David A. Goslin;
the associate executive director, Heidi I. Hartmann; and the associate
director for reports, Eugenia Grohman. Rose S. Kaufman kept our ac-
counts and gave frequent help on administrative matters. The work of
each one is deeply appreciated.
Our thanks to all who helped are profuse. But those cited and each
member of the committee know that our greatest debt of gratitude is owed
to Royce Hanson, study director of the project. With minimal resources
at his disposal and with a committee far-flung and diverse in its mem-
bership, Royce more than anyone else gave the project its energy, sub-
stance, and coherence.
As this report was being readied for publication, Harvey S. Perloff died.
Harvey was the moving force behind the creation of the committee and
served as chair until his health required him to step aside in 1982. He
remained an active member, however, and this report carries the imprint
of his guidance and thought. As an educator, planner, and activist, Harvey
was never content to accept existing ideas even his own as adequate
for tomorrow's problems. From the outset of our work he insisted that
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x
Preface
the role of the committee should be to rethink and reconstruct the basis
for urban policy. To the extent that this report meets that test, it reflects
Harvey's intellectual spirit.
The committee fully appreciates that no study that makes policy pro-
posals can claim to be completely objective or that the recommendations
are inevitable conclusions from the data and information. Policies represent
choices; our proposals for urban policy are no different, and some of our
choices will no doubt be controversial. We have made them not to reject
other alternatives as unsound but as a statement of preference about which
reasonable people may disagree. Our purpose, therefore, is not so much
to offer a prescription as it is to stimulate a more vigorous and informed
dialogue about the role and purpose of urban policy in the spectrum of
national economic policy.
Paul N. Ylvisaker, Chair
Committee on National Urban Policy
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Contents
1. Overview
2. The Economy and Cities
3. The New Urban System
4. Basic Concepts for Urban Economic Strategy
5. Investing Private and Public Capital in the Urban Future
6. Investing in the Future of the Urban Labor Force
7. Stabilizing Metropolitan Economies
8. Fostering Local Institutions to Manage the Transition
9. Rethinking Urban Policy
References
Biographical Sketches of Committee Members and Staff
Index
X1
1
11
38
59
71
97
135
152
171
184
198
205
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Tables aM Figures
TABLES
1. Labor Force Distribution, by Industry Sectors for
Seven Industrialized Countries, 1970 and Projected to
2000
2. Percentage Distribution of Employed Population, by
Occupational Group, 1960, 1976, and 1982
3. Percentage Distribution of Employment Among
Occupations for Each Industry and for the United
States, 1975
4. Percentage Distribution of Less-Than-Full-Time,
Full-Year Employment Share in Each Industry
Occupational Subgroup in the United States, 1975
5. Percentage Distribution of Civilian Employment in
Occupations With 25,000 or More Workers
6. The 140 Largest Metropolitan Areas Classified by
Type and Size, 1980
7. Percentage Distribution of Actual and Projected
Annual Growth Rates for Employment in Selected
Industries
8. Metropolitan Areas With the Highest Unemployment
Rates, July 1982
9. Metropolitan Areas With the Lowest Unemployment
Rates, July 1982
x~
13
24
25
28
29
41
99
100
101
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XIV
10. Estimated Numbers of Dislocated Workers in January
1983 Under Alternative Criteria and Economic
Assumptions
11. Federal Costs of Providing Readjustment Services to
Dislocated Workers Defined by Selected Criteria, FY
1983
FIGURES
1. Percentage Distribution of Full-Time-Equivalent Em-
ployees Among Industries, 1948- 1977
2. The Transition in Cleveland, 1954-1976
3. Shares of the Gross National Product for Services and
Nonservices, 1948- 1978 and 1990-2030
4. Economic Performance of Cities and Their Regions
5. Classification Scheme of the 140 Largest Metropolitan
Areas
Tables and Figures
103
117
20
23
32
37
40
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Rethinking Urban Policy
Urban Development in an Advanced Economy
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