Cities in a Globalizing World: Governance, Performance, and Sustainability. Frannie A. Léautier Vice President World Bank Institute

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Cities in a Globalizing World: Governance, Performance, and Sustainability Frannie A. Léautier Vice President World Bank Institute

Growth of Cities, 1950-2050 Population (millions) 10000 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 1950 2000 1975 1000 2000 0 World More developed regions Less developed regions 2025 2050 Source: World Population Prospects: The 2000 Revision, vol1, Comprehensive Tables (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.01.XIII.8 and Corr.1).

Understanding cities in a globalizing world Cities are the birthplace of globalization Globalization helps/hurts cities? Cities are the testing ground for governance and democracy What is the role of governance in city performance? What is the impact of city performance on globalization?

The Research Purpose To test assumptions about globalization and urbanization To assess policy implications of findings Scope Research is exploratory and confirmatory Data limitations make it difficult to draw valid conclusions on the impact of globalization on city performance The paucity of data is a key obstacle to effective policy design at the national and subnational level Opportunities for future research

Research Approach Confirmatory Analysis with hypothesis development and empirical tests Exploratory Analysis using existing data bases Case Studies developing them from secondary and primary sources Theoretical Analysis game theory, political economy

Five key themes Globalization of city infrastructure: Local, networked and global services? Globalization and city performance: Does governance play a role? City performance profiles: What happened in Africa? Globalization and city governance: Dynamics between the mayor, citizens, and firms? Globalization, technology, and scale: How do they interact?

Globalization of City Infrastructure: Local, Networked, and Global Services?

Globalization of City Infrastructure Infrastructure networks are the foundations for urban globalization Infrastructure plant and service are mainly local, but demands are increasingly global Vulnerability and security heighten some old conflicts Individual preferences vs. collective interests Meeting immediate demands vs. serving future generations Maintenance for daily use vs. maintenance for more security Globalized infrastructure requires new institutions to manage the interface between local and global interests

For example: Local-Global conflict requires new institutions... New institutions, operating at the community, local, national, regional and global levels, have to respond to preferences of various stakeholders and respect the hierarchy of interests. Overton Park, Memphis TN 1956: citizens block the construction of a highway linking Memphis to other cities to preserve a local park Jamuna Bridge, Bangladesh 1994-1998: locating project-affected people in a land-scarce country and handling environmental problems of river-training to construct bridge linking cities in the NW region to Dhaka and linking Bangladesh to trade in India Chad-Cameroon Pipeline, 2003: extensive local and international consultation for environmental and social protection including of future generations for an international financed and owned pipeline

...leading to greater... Democratization of decision-making Memphis TN and Jamuna bridge stakeholders Decentralization due to emergence of small-scale producers enabling distributed supply of services Uganda electricity Diffusion of new ideas due to rise of multinational infrastructure provision, migration, travel and trade, and communications technology Diversification of citizen preference with respect to preservation and protection versus consumption and use or the balance between efficiency and quality of life

Assessing institutional performance? The approach Exploration of globalization and city performance Construct worldwide database for more than 400 cities Measure globalization at both country and city level Examine city governance and city performance jointly and separately Definition of urban governance the processes that steer and take into account the links among stakeholders local authorities, citizens, firms to favor active participation and negotiation among actors, transparent decisionmaking mechanisms, and innovation in urban management policies Defining city governance and globalization as outcomes that are visible to citizens allows empirical tests of the city as a place or as an enduring performance

City Performance Profiles: Economic Performance of Cities, 1993 Cities in countries that are Indicator More globalized Less globalized City product per capita (1993 US$/year/person) Average per capita income (Q3/person in US$) 3,818 2,066 1,175 377 Informal employment (percent) 32 40 Source: UNCHS 1998, Global Urban Indicators.

City Performance Profiles: Residential Density, Growth Rates, and Household Size, 1993 Indicator Residential density (persons / ha) Annual population growth rates (percent) Average household size (persons) Cities in countries that are More globalized Less globalized 96 252 2 3 3 5 City Performance Profiles: Equity in Cities, 1993 Cities in countries that are Indicator Households below poverty line (percent) Income disparity (Q5/Q1) Source: UNCHS 1998, Global Urban Indicators. More globalized 26 7 Less globalized 27 12

City Performance Profiles: Transportation, 1993 Indicator Mean travel time to work (minutes) Modes of travel to work Better balance between pedestrian and motorized forms of travel in more globalized cities Cities in countries that are More globalized 30 Less globalized 35 Private car (% of total to work trips) Train /tram (% of total to work trips) Bus /mini bus (% of total to work trips) Motorcycle (% of total to work trips) Bicycle (% of total to work trips) On foot (% of total to work trips) Other (% of total to work trips) 25 14 23 4 11 24 2 10 7 37 12 7 22 13 Note: Percentages do not add to 100 due to rounding. Source: UNCHS 1998, Global Urban Indicators.

Urban Local Government Revenue and Capital Expenditure, 1993 Indicator Local government revenue per capita (1993 US$ / year / person) Local government capital expenditure per capita (1993 US$ / year / person) Wages in the local government budget (%) Cities in countries that are More globalized 266 104 21 Less globalized 115 22 38 Source: UNCHS 1998, Global Urban Indicators.

Globalization and City Performance: Does governance play a role?

Globalization and city performance: The key role of governance The approach Define Globalized City as a place : location with precise boundaries but plugged into global flows (finance, people, products) Define Globalized city as a sustained achievement of performance providing services to citizens and firms over time City mayor as an actor who brings local value to citizens from global activities Citizens participate in key decision making, and the interests of firms are balanced with those of citizens by the city mayor = governance in the context of globalization and local interests The size of a city and the services it provides over time is a test of sustainability as it interacts with other cities to which it is connected = city performance in the context of globalization

City Governance and Globalization as Determinants of City Performance High performance Quality of city governance Low performance Well-governed local city I Poorly governed local city II Expected Worst Performance Extent of city globalization Well-governed global city IV Poorly governed global city III

Key Hypotheses Hypothesis 1: Governance matters A city can be well-performing whether local or global, driven by its good governance alone (quadrants I and IV) Hypothesis 2: Globalization matters A global city is better performing than a local city, for a given quality of governance (quadrants III and IV) Hypothesis 3: Globalization and governance interact positively There is a dynamic virtuous circle which pushes globalized cities to be better governed and which attracts further globalization in well-governed cities

Testing the Hypotheses Comparison of performance for global and local cities Global city is one with many offices of major international advertising, accounting, and financial firms in the city Local city is one with fewer of such offices City Performance is measured by access to: Local services (water, sewerage) Networked services (electricity, phone lines) Globalized services (cell phones, internet) Governance at country level is measured by: Control of corruption index Bribery to affect laws Diversion of public funds Illegal party financing Bribery in permits and taxes Organized crime Governance at city level is measured by: Control of corruption Bribery in utility State capture

Local Services: Access to Water, City Governance and Globalization (Non OECD Sample) 100% Poor Governance Good Governance Local City Global City Access to Water (%) 20% Control of Corruption Bribery in Utility State Capture Control of Corruption Bribery in Utility State Capture Sources: EOS 2003, UN 1998, KK 2002 & KLM 2004

Networked Services: Access to Electricity, City Governance and Globalization (Non OECD Sample) 100% Poor Governance Good Governance Local City Global City Access to E lectricity (% ) 70% 40% Control of Corruption Bribery in Utility State Capture Control of Corruption Sources: EOS 2003, UN 1998, KK 2002 & KLM 2004 Bribery in Utility State Capture

Globalized Services: Access to Cell Phones, City Governance and Globalization (Non OECD Sample) High 7 Poor Governance Good Governance Local City Global City Access to Cell Phones Low 4 1 Control of Corruption Bribery in Utility State Capture Control of Corruption Sources: EOS 2003, KK 2002 & KLM 2004 Bribery in Utility State Capture

Local, Networked, and Globalized Infrastructure Services Significant and large Full City Sample Global City Local City Differential Full City Sample Global City Local City Differential Full City Sample Global City Local City Differential Bribery in Utility 0.11*** 0.10* 0.09** 0.01 Bribery in Utility 0.05** 0.05 0.05* 0.00 GLOBALIZED SERVICE: INTERNET ACCESS AT SCHOOL (1-7) Bribery in Utility 0.99*** 0.97*** 0.64*** 0.34* LOCAL SERVICE: ACCESS TO WATER (%) State Capture 0.10*** 0.04 0.10** -0.06 NETWORKED SERVICE: ACCESS TO ELECRICITY (%) State Capture 0.05** 0.06* 0.07* -0.01 State Capture 0.93*** 0.82*** 0.78*** 0.04 Control of Corruption 0.11*** 0.06* 0.15*** -0.09* Control of Corruption 0.05*** 0.06** 0.07** -0.01 Control of Corruption 1.12*** 0.98*** 1.21*** -0.23

Significant Source Dependent Variables Global City (3) UN 1988 Access to Water % 0/0 Country and City Globalization Matter Governance Matters UN 1998 Access to Electricity % 0/0 EOS 2003 Access to Telephone Lines 1-7 +/0 EOS 2003 Internet Access 1-7 0/0 EOS 2003 Quality of Infrastructure 1-7 +/0 Kearney Globalization Index 0/ 0/0 +/* +/* +++/*** Control of Corruption +/** 0/* ++++/*** +/0 ++++/*** Income per Capita +/*** +/** ++++/*** +++/*** ++++/*** # of cities 63 61 194 194 194 Adjusted R- Squared 0.28 0.11 0.39 0.28 0.45 Source: Kaufmann-Leautier-Mastruzzi database

Globalization and Governance Interact Positively: both city and country level globalization matter Source EOS EOS EOS EOS EOS EOS 2003 2003 2003 2003 2003 2003 Dependent Variables Global City (3) Kearney Globalizat ion Index # of Cities Adjusted R-Square Low Bribery in Utilities +/ ++++/* ** 193 0.30 Low Informal Money Laundering ++/*** ++++/** * 193 0.21 Low Street Crime +/ Country Variables ++++/* ** 193 0.19 Red Tape Cost of Imports City Variables -/** -/*** 193 0.24 Low Bribery to affect laws ++/** +++/** * 193 0.21 Low Diversion of public funds ++/** ++++/* ** 193 0.29 EOS 2003 Low Illegal Party Financing ++/*** ++++/** * 193 0.17 City level governance indicator = global city Country level governance indicator = Kearney Index Source: Kaufmann-Leautier-Mastruzzi database, drawing from EOS-WEF 2003 as well as other sources per below. Sample size: 412 cities in 134 countries

City Performance Profiles: What happened in Africa?

City Performance Profiles: The Special Case of Africa Tremendous growth of urbanization in developing countries Differential performance of cities: Economic performance (production, jobs, income) Residential density, growth, household size Equity Access to services (transport, waste management, health and education) City government performance (revenues, expenditures, wages) Safety and security (urban crime) African cities perform well below their counterparts in the developing world, yet post the highest growth among urban populations Special dilemma of Africa: urbanization without globalization high urban growth not accompanied by the corresponding rapid economic growth Possible to test hypotheses in Africa since there is high urbanization with low globalization relating to locus of policy decisions with respect to cities

City-Level Performance Across Regions Indicator Africa Arab states Asia Pacific Latin America Industrial ized countries Transition economies City waste management services Regular waste collection (from percent of city households) 36 65 67 85 99 91 Waste water treated (percent of generated waste water) 15 54 26 18 87 64 Health and education in cities Child mortality (percent of children< 5 yrs.) 12 8 5 5 0.4 0.8 Children per primary classroom 62 42 40 34 23 11 Source: UNCHS 1998; Foreign Policy 2003.

City-Level Performance Across Regions Indicator Local government revenue per capita (1993 US$/year/person) Local government capital exp. per capita (1993 US$/year/person) Economic performance of cities City product per capita (1993 US$/year/person) Africa 15 10 682 Arab states City government revenue, capital expenditure and wages 1682 32 2,095 Source: UNCHS 1998; Foreign Policy 2003. Asia Pacific 245 234 862 Latin America 252 100 225 Industrial ized countries 2763 1133 22,926 Transition economies 237 77 2,962

City Performance for Three African Countries by Level of Globalization: The Role of Governance? Indicator 33 37 41 Botswana outperforms Nigeria and Senegal, both at higher levels of globalization, in access to local and networked services, security/safety, and other city characteristics City population growth rates (percent/year) Average household size (persons) Murders (per 1,000 city population) Thefts (per 1,000 city population) Mean travel time to work (minutes) Solid waste generated per capita (tons / year / person) Regular waste collection (from percent of city households) Waste water treated (percent of generated waste water) Solid waste disposed in open dump (percent of total disposed waste) Botswana 8.4 3.5 0.007 0.5 20 0.01 98 95 99 Nigeria 4.4 5.5 0.02 1.1 53 0.20 31 0.5 28 Senegal 4.7 8.1 n.a. n.a. 28 0.17 n.a. 0.8 100 Source: UNCHS 1998, Global Urban Indicators; Foreign Policy 2003.

City Performance for Three African Countries by Level of Globalization: The Role of Governance? Botswana outperforms Nigeria and Senegal both at higher levels of globalization in terms of local government and economic performance at the city level Indicator Local government revenue per capita (1993 US$/year/person) Local government capital exp. per capita (1993 US$/year/person) Wages in the local government budget (percent) City product per capita (1993 US$/year/person 33 Botswana 250 181 43 594 37 Nigeria 3 0.9 41 57 41 Senegal 9 2.2 24 620

Globalization and City Governance: Dynamic interactions between the mayor, citizens, and firms?

How do these outcomes come about? Figure 1 Citizen's Choice Citizen 0 Exit Loyal Voice Mayor Ignore Satisfy Ignore Satisfy Exit Locate Influence Exit Locate Influence Exit Locate Influence Exit Locate Influence 1 2 Firm Ignore Exit Satisfy 4 5 6 Ignore Loyal Satisfy 8 9 10 Mayor Ignore Exit Satisfy 12 13 14 Ignore Loyal Satisfy 16 3 Citizen 7 11 15

Citizen s Choice Citizen's Choice Exit Loyal Voice Ignore Satisfy Ignore Satisfy Citizens care about quality of life Mayor influences quality of life and control of corruption Firms influence globalization

Firm s Options in light of Passive Citizens: Does it lead to bad governance? Citizen's Choice Loyal Ignore Exit Locate Influence 5 6 7 Citizens care about quality of life Mayor influences quality of life and control of corruption Firms influence globalization

Firm s Options from Voice: Does it lead to good governance? Citizen's Choice Voice Ignore Exit Locate Influence 8 9 10 Citizens care about quality of life Mayor influences quality of life and control of corruption Firms influence globalization

Quality of Life and Control of Corruption both matter 120 Quality of Life 110 100 R 2 = 0.3479 90 1 2 3 4 Poor Control Good Control Control of Corruption Source: Control of Corruption: KK04, 56 Quality of life: Mercer 2004, 56 cities. Mercer s survey provides an evaluation quality of life in 215 cities. We have used the cities with the top 50 ranking in quality of life to catch the maximum effect of the corruption variable. The Mercer study is based on detailed assessments and evaluations of 39 key quality of life determinants, grouped in the following categories: political and social Environment; Economic environment; Socio-cultural environment; Medical and health considerations; Schools And Education; Public services and transportation; Recreation; Consumer goods; Housing; and Natural Environment. Quality of Life Index: New York City=100 (Highest: Zurich, Lowest: Brazzaville).

City Globalization and Quality of Life both matter City Globalization 110 90 70 50 30 R 2 = 0.1344 10 90 100 110 120 Poor Quality Good Quality Quality of Life Source: Control of Corruption: KK04, 56 cities. Globaliization data taken from Taylor 2001. Globalization is defined as the number of international firms located in the citty. 46 'global' advanced producer service firms over 55 world cities. Global firms are defined by having offices in at least 15 different cities. The analysis is Done using the cities in the top 50 of the quality of life ranking according to Mercer 2004. An analysis done Using 261 cities from the Kaufmann-Leautier-Mastruzzi database indicates that when more cities are included The regression line is positive and significant, with good governance contributing to more globalization.

Globalization, Technology, and Scale: How do they interact?

Patterns from History: Largest City Population in the Last 5,000 Years City Population (Thousands) 25,000 23,000 2500 20,000 2000 15,000 10,000 5,000 y = -362.5x 3 + 4870.8x 2-16406x + 14071 R 2 = 0.5562 Growth Decline Decline 10,000 1500 1000 0 400 1,000 450 900 1,100 500-5,000 195BCE 775 935 1750 1800 1975 2005 Year 0 Source: Population data taken from Chandler, Tertius. 1987. Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth: An Historical Census. Lewiston: St. Gourds.

City Size and Quality of Life Variable Small cities <0.5m Midsize cities 0.5<p<1m Large cities 1<p<5m Megacities >5m Quality of Life (0-100) 69.0 65.5 61.5 64.7 Number of cities 13 20 53 19 Source: Mercer Human Resource Consulting 2002 and 2005

Access to service Water (%) Electricity (%) Telephone (%) Cell phones (1-7) City Performance and City Type Internet in schools (1-7) Quality of infrastructure (1-7) # of cities Source: UNCHS 1998, EOS-World Economic Forum 2003. No 64 79 90 5.7 3.3 3.2 167 Port Yes 62 70 81 5.9 3.5 3.4 106 No 59 73 84 5.8 3.5 3.3 178 Capital Port cities have poorer access to services, except for internet, cell phones, quality of infrastructure all variables linked to globalization Capital cities have better access to services Indication of political influence? Yes 65 76 87 5.7 3.0 3.3 96

City Performance and Technology Access to service Website Budget on site Start-abusiness info on site No Yes No Yes No Yes Water (%) 62 68 63 92 62 90 Electricity (%) 75 76 75 91 74 93 Telephone (%) 84 93 86 99 86 95 Cell phones (1-7) 5.7 6.1 5.8 6.1 5.8 6.0 Internet in schools (1-7) 3.3 3.4 3.3 3.4 3.3 3.5 Quality of infrastructure (1-7) 3.3 3.4 3.3 3.5 3.3 3.5 # of cities 210 58 262 6 256 12 Source: UNCHS 1998, EOS-World Economic Forum 2003. Technology is an enabler of voice but also provides citizens exit options for self-provision (blue vs red cells) Transparency of information (budget and starting a business) has a positive impact on city performance

Some Observations Cities play an important role in shaping global decisions (trade, diplomacy, culture, governance). City performance is trackable over long periods. Technology and globalization are intensively interlinked: Advances in technology influence not only globalization, but also governance. Good performance has little to do with city size, but good governance is more often obtained in large cities. Modeling interactions between mayors, citizens, and firms can provides insights on the types of policies that are critical for good city management. Africa has a particular pattern of urbanization and globalization, and the lessons point to key areas for attention. Data weaknesses prevent us from making firmer conclusions that could inform better policies.

Policy Implications Reforms should focus on improving national governance. International financial institutions should continue to assess the quality of national governance in their member countries. Governance at the local level matters significantly for urban performance. Reformist city leaders should use the local policy and institutional levers at their disposal to translate global opportunity into local value for their citizens. Donor agencies could focus more on supporting improvements in city-level governance.

Policy Implications (cont d) Build the skills that city managers need to better manage the opportunities of globalization. Different skills are required for port cities and capital cities. The donor community should work with city governments and intercity networks and partnerships to support their globalization and governance efforts. Countries and international institutions should develop new institutions that can operate at local, regional, national, and multinational levels.

Policy Implications (cont d) Africa Africa should continue in its process of decentralization, which has the potential of yielding the benefits of both globalization and urbanization. Coastal and larger cities should start to play a more global or regional rather than a national role in order to tap into urbanization. Train city managers in Africa to better balance the tension between offering services that can make their cities attractive to foreign investment, while continuing to serve the needs of their growing populations and regional economies.

Bridge the data gaps: Future Research Collect data at the city level to complement the existing rich historical data; Collect comparable cross-city data on globalization and urban governance; Expand the 400 city KLM database to shed light on the dynamics between globalization and governance and their interface with city performance. Further explore the following themes: the characteristics of services to citizens and their implications for choice; the behavior of the firm and citizen together or separately to shed light on the interface between technology and behaviors related to voice, exit, and loyalty. Design a methodology that captures the dynamics of urban governance over time (building on the game theoretical model) to help explain city performance in Africa.