Defining Global City: - To Others, Cities Which Represent Brain Hubs Are The Most Important 21 Century Cities
The document discusses defining global cities and criteria used to measure them. Global cities are important hubs of innovation with concentrated human capital and knowledge economies. They are more interconnected globally than nationally. Consulting firms and researchers use various criteria to measure global cities like business activity, human capital, information exchange, cultural experience, and political engagement.
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Defining Global City: - To Others, Cities Which Represent Brain Hubs Are The Most Important 21 Century Cities
The document discusses defining global cities and criteria used to measure them. Global cities are important hubs of innovation with concentrated human capital and knowledge economies. They are more interconnected globally than nationally. Consulting firms and researchers use various criteria to measure global cities like business activity, human capital, information exchange, cultural experience, and political engagement.
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Defining Global City
• To others, cities which
represent brain hubs are the most important 21st century cities – There is concentration of innovative people, with good human ecosystems for cutting-edge businesses (Economist Enrico Moretti) – The continuation of success of Western economies hinges on knowledge economy: creation of new ideas, technologies and
products Defining Global
City – To Moretti, the most important cities are not primarily financial hubs but thriving hubs of digital innovation – Compared with “struggling cities”: those with low human capital base – with low proportion of college graduates in the entire urban populationDefining Global City • The existence of global cities challenge state-centric perspective of political economy that the state dominates in economic affairs – Global cities have more interconnectedness with other cities and across a transnational field of action than with national economy – They are de-linked or disembedded from their national economiesCase Study 1: Various Criteria for Global Cities used by Consulting Firms, Think Tanks, and Research Institutions • A.T. Kearney Global Consulting’s Global Cities Index • Business Activity (headquarters, services firms, capital markets value, number of international conferences, value of goods through ports and airports) • Human Capital (size of foreign born population, quality of universities, number of international schools, international student population, number of residents with college degrees) • Information Exchange (accessibility of major TV news channels, Internet presence (basically number of search hits), number of international news bureaus, censorship, and broadband subscriber rate)Case Study 1: Various Criteria for Global Cities used by Consulting Firms, Think Tanks, and Research Institutions • A.T. Kearney Global Consulting’s Global Cities Index • Cultural Experience (number of sporting event, museums, performing arts venues, culinary establishments, international visitors, and sister city relationships). • Political Engagement (number of embassies and consulates, think tanks, international organizations, political conferences)