From Locational Fundamentals to Increasing ReturnsThe Spatial Concentration of Population in Spain, 1787-2000

  1. Ayuda Bosque, María Isabel
  2. Pinilla Navarro, Vicente José
  3. Collantes Gutiérrez, Fernando
Revista:
Documentos de trabajo ( Universidad de Zaragoza. Facultad de Economía y Empresa )

ISSN: 2171-6668

Año de publicación: 2005

Número: 5

Tipo: Documento de Trabajo

Otras publicaciones en: Documentos de trabajo ( Universidad de Zaragoza. Facultad de Economía y Empresa )

Resumen

Does population follow the same inverted-U pattern of concentration/dispersion that has been found in the case of economic activity in the long run? In this paper we present the evidence for eight European countries during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and find that, contrary to the inverted-U hypothesis, population has shown a steady, long-run trend towards concentration. After that, we estimate population density and population growth equations for the case of one of these countries, Spain from 1787 to 2000. Our results suggest that locational fundamentals (such as natural endowments) explain the distribution of population before industrialization and that industrialization reinforced the pre-existing regional population disparities, especially as the share of increasingreturns sectors in the Spanish economy became significant (that is, mainly during the twentieth century).