Impact on Surrounding Metropolitan Areas

edit

The emergence of edge cities has not been without consequences to the metropolitan areas they surround. Edge cities arise from population decentralization from large major core cities that has been ongoing since the 1960's. Shifts in socioeconomics in metro areas, location of metro industrial areas, and labor competition between edge cities and their more central neighbors have been attributed to their development and continued expansion. There has been a considerable debate among economists as to whether "jobs follow people or people follow jobs" [1]but in the context of the edge city phenomenon, workers have been drawn from metropolitan business hubs in favor of the edge city economy. Developers of edge cities have been shown to strategically plan expansion of such business areas to draw workers away from more dense port cities and thereby keep profits from surrounding interests.[2]

  1. ^ Ding, Chendri; Bingham, Richard (July 1, 2000). "Beyond edge cities: Job centralization and urban sprawl". Urban Affairs Review. 35 (6): 838. Retrieved March 29, 2017.
  2. ^ Henderson, Vernon; Mitra, Arindam (October 10 ,1995). "The new urban landscape: Developers and edge cities". Regional Science and Economics. 26 (6): 613–643. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)