Growth, innovation, scaling, and the pace of life in cities

被引:1539
作者
Bettencourt, Luis M. A. [1 ]
Lobo, Jose
Helbing, Dirk
Kuehnert, Christian
West, Geoffrey B.
机构
[1] Los Alamos Natl Lab, Div Theoret, Los Alamos, NM 87545 USA
[2] Arizona State Univ, Global Inst Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
[3] Tech Univ Dresden, Inst Transport & Econ, D-01062 Dresden, Germany
[4] Santa Fe Inst, Santa Fe, NM 87501 USA
关键词
population; sustainability; urban studies; increasing returns; economics of scale; SUSTAINABILITY TRANSITION; INCREASING RETURNS; POPULATION-GROWTH; GENERAL-MODEL; URBANIZATION; ENVIRONMENT; SCIENCE; CLIMATE; TRENDS; SIZE;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0610172104
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Humanity has just crossed a major landmark in its history with the majority of people now living in cities. Cities have long been known to be society's predominant engine of innovation and wealth creation, yet they are also its main source of crime, pollution, and disease. The inexorable trend toward urbanization worldwide presents an urgent challenge for developing a predictive, quantitative theory of urban organization and sustainable development. Here we present empirical evidence indicating that the processes relating urbanization to economic development and knowledge creation are very general, being shared by all cities belonging to the same urban system and sustained across different nations and times. Many diverse properties of cities from patent production and personal income to electrical cable length are shown to be power law functions of population size with scaling exponents, beta, that fall into distinct universality classes. Quantities reflecting wealth creation and innovation have beta approximate to 1.2 > 1 (increasing returns), whereas those accounting for infrastructure display beta approximate to 0.8 < 1 (economies of scale). We predict that the pace of social life in the city increases with population size, in quantitative agreement with data, and we discuss how cities are similar to, and differ from, biological organisms, for which beta < 1. Finally, we explore possible consequences of these scaling relations by deriving growth equations, which quantify the dramatic difference between growth fueled by innovation versus that driven by economies of scale. This difference suggests that, as population grows, major innovation cycles must be generated at a continually accelerating rate to sustain growth and avoid stagnation or collapse.
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页码:7301 / 7306
页数:6
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