Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 05/2008

Infrastructure as Economic Density

Sangaralingam Ramesh

December 2007

School of Oriental and African Studies - University of London

Abstract

Income disparities are rising in China as a consequence of the economic reforms post 1979 which virtually gave unchallenged economic growth and prosperity to the coastal regions whose economic growth increased over the last 30 years at the expense of the interior hinterland. Institutions in China have seen the answer to restoring a rural-urban income balance by redistributing people from the interior regions of China to the prosperous coastal regions. This can be seen as a supply side reaction to the income disparity problem, which will inevitably impose the kinds of social costs, which concentrations of populations normally bring. This paper offers insights into other methods of transforming the urban-rural income disparity problem in China, the economic implications of infrastructure investment, the relevance of Krugmans ‘New Economic Geography’ to the transformative Economics which China has experienced over the last 30 years; and the close relationship between how Krugman’s agglomeration economies arise and the development of SEZ’s and HTDZ’s in China.