
Cityscapes
Latin America and BeyondWinter 2003
Understanding Santiago de Chile
Edward L. Glaeser
To this urbanist,
the cities of Latin America inspire grand passions. The cities north of
the Rio Grande include old friends and occasionally disliked acquaintances.
I?m very fond of Chicago; Los Angeles irks me. But I could never
use such tepid terms about the great cities of South America. I enjoy
Beacon Hill, but my heart stops when I think about sunset along the beach
at Ipanema. San Francisco can be charming, but Buenos Aires, even during
last year?s riots, is always dazzling. American ghettos are very
sad, but their sadness is dwarfed by the seas of deprivation that exist
in the favelas of far too many Latin American cities.
Latin American cities are enticing to students of cities because they
combine great promise and great tragedy. Central Paris is beautiful, but
it?s difficult to get excited about trying to fix the problems of
the Place des Vosges. To an urban economist, that is the equivalent of
a doctor specializing in the minor ailments of the very rich. Detroit
has problems, but I have long argued that in the long run, the happiness
of Detroit?s current residents will be better served by letting
the city collapse, than by trying to undertake the impossible task of
revitalizing a city that no longer has any economic rationale. Mexico
City, Caracas, Bogotá, Lima, São Paulo, Buenos Aires and
Santiago (among others) suffer from congestion, pollution, crime, and
vast social inequities, but each one has achieved some measure of greatness
and has the potential to be much, much better. The great cities of Latin
America, to some extent, combine the social problems of Detroit with the
promise of a Paris. This is what makes them so exciting to me and to many
other urban economists.
My serious involvement with Latin American cities began 10 years ago during
my first year as an assistant professor at Harvard University. Then, as
now, many of the most brilliant of our Ph.D. students came from South
and Central America. One of the students in the first Ph.D. class on urban
economics that I ever taught was a Chilean, Juan Braun. Juan and his family
(his father had been a student at Harvard in the 1960s) had a profound
interest in the problems of Santiago, and indeed in the urban problems
of Chile broadly defined. While Chile has received a remarkable amount
of attention from economists over the last three decades, little of that
attention has been devoted to urban issues.
The Brauns were convinced that Chile had major urban problems stemming
from centralization in Santiago?they believed that congestion, pollution,
and infrastructure problems were not being studied. They, and the firm
Forrestal Valparaiso, commissioned John Meyer (a founding father of transportation
economics) and myself to lead a team of researchers to analyze Chile?s
urban problems. This year, the fruits of that research were published
by Harvard University Press in the form of the edited volume Chile: The
Political Economy of Urban Development.
The book is loosely organized around the question: Is Santiago too big?
This same question could be asked of many American cities which dominate
their hinterlands to an extent that is almost unimaginable to a denizen
of our suburbanized nation. More than one-third of Chileans live within
the metropolitan area of the capital city. Buenos Aires and Montevideo
are similarly dominant within their own countries. While the U.S. and
Canada are nations of remarkably decentralized urban systems, Latin American
countries are nations with dramatic centralization. Our book tried to
understand why this pattern occurred and attempted to define the social
costs and benefits of this centralization.
In addition to editing the volume, I undertook a wide-ranging study of
the mega-city phenomenon. Jointly with another
Ph.D. student, Alberto Ades (from Buenos Aires), I published a paper called
?Trade and Circuses: Explaining Urban Giants,? in the Quarterly
Journal of Economics, which used cross-national data and urban history,
back to Rome, to understand the mega-city phenomenon. We found that urban
centralization has more to do with politics than economics. In stable
democracies, on average, 23 percent of the urban population live in the
largest city. In dictatorships, the comparable number is 35 percent, and
these largest cities are almost always the capitals. Small capitals are
almost uniquely a feature of former British colonies, which generally
undertook large political efforts to ensure that they would not develop
imperial cities, which grew large on the wealth of the hinterland.
The U.S. Senate, somewhat absurdly but not irrationally, unduly empowers
the empty spaces of the American west. In a world where the hinterland
is not protected by artificial institutions such as this, political influence
depreciates with space. The nation?s leaders care about riots in
the capital but to them, agrarian revolts hundreds of miles away are far
less troubling. Activists close to the corridors of power can effectively
lobby in a way that people far away cannot. As a result of this greater
influence, the government ends up spending more on people who live close
to the capital. The bread allocations in classical Rome favored the capital
city, and government spending in 1950s Mexico under the PRI did the same.
As government spending favors the capital, the residents of the hinterland
mobilize, fleeing rural poverty to get their share of government largesse.
The outcome of this pro-capital distribution of government favors is a
large capital city. This is why political factors are so powerful in explaining
the presence of mega-cities: these political factors determine the extent
to which there is a pro-capital bias in government policies.
Chile: The Political Economy of Urban Development tried to understand
this urbanization process in one country and then asked: what would better
urban policies look like? During the era of Santiago?s greatest
expansion, during the early 1970s and earlier, we found a familiar pattern:
government spending was highly oriented towards the capital city. Large
scale spending on infrastructure, education and social programs was all
disproportionately oriented towards Santiago. But by the 1990s, this pattern
had essentially disappeared. We could find little evidence (outside of
higher education and the subway system) of an uneven distribution of resources.
The transition of Chile into a stable democratic system had led to a spatial
equity and as a result, the growth of Santiago (relative to the rest of
the country) had leveled off.
Still, the legacy of a century of disproportionate growth remained with
us. Even though the government now appears to be spatially neutral, the
city?s dominance creates a number of major problems, which we thought
necessitated reform. Our book contains essays on transportation, pollution,
housing, environmental infrastructure and social services such as education.
All of these essays presented specific suggestions for reform, many of
which have now been implemented.
Matthew Kahn (now of Tufts) and Suzi Kerr (then a Harvard Ph.D. student,
now Director of Motu Research) addressed Santiago?s pollution problem.
Like Los Angeles, Santiago suffers from a thermal inversion problem, which
means that the pollution generated by its businesses, households and cars
doesn?t blow away, but instead creates dark, pollution covered skies,
reminiscent of Victorian London or industrial Pittsburgh. While Santiago?s
geography conspires to create a harmful air quality, man-made factors,
such as unpaved roads, leaded gasoline and traditional fireplaces, can
all be changed to make the city more livable. Indeed, there have been
dramatic changes in the air quality of the Los Angeles Basin since the
1970s, which reflect the technological improvements in gasoline and the
automobile. Kahn and Kerr argued for a higher gasoline tax, and policies
that would update the automobile fleet (in paricular the buses). Paving
roads and penalizing businesses that pollute would also help to make the
city more livable.
John Kain (the erstwhile ornament of Harvard?s urban economics program)
and his student Zhi Liu (a former Harvard Ph.D. student, now of the World
Bank) focused on transportation policy. They argued that mistaken government
policies had led to an imbalance of investment in rail and roads, both
in Santiago and across the country. Instead of expanding Santiago?s
subway system, Kain and Liu argued for dedicated bus lanes and better
road infrastructure. They particularly emphasized the fact that the highway
system was under-developed outside of the Santiago metropolitan area,
and that this contributed to the congestion in the central city. Kain
and Liu also suggested that a combination of more road construction and
congestion pricing (i.e. higher tolls and taxes on car usage in the central
city) could be used to make the streets more user-friendly.
Amerita Daniere and José Gómez-Ibañez tackled the
area of environmental infrastructure. In the early 1990s, typhoid and
cholera were significant problems in Santiago and appeared to be closely
linked to the failure to treat wastewater properly. It is an axiom of
local public finance that producing clean water is the most critical function
of city governments. Daniere and Gómez-Ibañez argued that
only six percent of Chile?s wastewater is appropriately treated
before disposal. To them, investment in waste treatment is a clear necessity
and should be the first order of business for the Santiago region.
Denise DiPasquale and Jean Cummings (of City Research) researched Chile?s
housing policies. Chile, like many cities, has an aggressive policy of
building public housing. The development of public housing in Santiago
appeared to follow the dictates of expediency rather than true social
costs. As such, the housing is built far away from employment centers,
creating daily commutes often upwards of two hours. Subsidized public
housing appears to have pursued a false economy by trying to minimize
land costs without considering the long-term costs of congestion and lost
time from commuting.
Finally, I looked at the provision of health, welfare and schooling expenditures
throughout Chile. While there were certainly past issues of underprovision
in the hinterland, I was impressed by the degree to which Chilean policies
had now managed to provide reasonable levels of primary schooling and
health services throughout the country. On the other hand, Chile?s
massively subsidized higher education sector overwhelmingly resides in
the capital. This subsidization both favors the wealthy (who are the primary
users of subsidized higher education) and ensures the continued concentration
of the country?s elites in Santiago. I urged a balancing of government
expenditures towards primary spending and greater spatial neutrality in
the subsidies for higher education.
I also looked at Chile?s political system and argued that it too
appeared to favor the capital city. For example, while Brazil and the
U.S. are marked by federal systems that leave a great deal of room for
local innovation, Chile is still remarkably centralized. As a result,
the growth of new cities is stunted, making it difficult for local entrepreneurs
to succeed. While American city governments have a great deal of freedom
to borrow and expand, Chilean cities are still dominated by central control,
which invariably tends to stifle local initiative. Unsurprisingly, these
observations led me to believe that political decentralization was a necessary
move for urban balance in the country.
While the book is about Chile, I have tended to take its lessons and its
methodology with me throughout the world. All of our lives are deeply
influenced by the cities in which we live, and these cities are ultimately
as much the product of government policy as of private initiative. As
such, government policies throughout the developing world must better
respond to the great problems of cities: pollution and congestion. Moreover,
the tendency of centralized political leaders to concentrate power in
their own hands is a curse to urban development outside the capital. Healthy
urban hierarchies depend on a government structure that respects local
initiative and protects the rights of people throughout the country, not
just the residents of the capital.
Edward L. Glaeser is a Professor of Economics in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University, where he has taught since 1992. He teaches urban and social economics and microeconomic theory. He has published dozens of papers on cities, economic growth, and law and economics.