Problems of Regional Economic Planning

Problems of Regional Economic Planning

Author: Jacques-Raoul Boudeville

Publisher: Edinburgh : Edinburgh U.P.

Published: 1966

Total Pages: 212

ISBN-13:

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Comparison of the economic theory of regional planning within national planning, and its application to France - covers concepts and definitions, regional economic research methodology, programming economic development, decentralization of public administration, regional operational models, etc., and analyses the fourth French plan at the national level and local level levels. References.


Regional Development

Regional Development

Author: George Demko

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-08-31

Total Pages: 382

ISBN-13: 1351594613

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Originally published in 1984. This volume brings together papers concerned with the problems of regional development in both Eastern and Western Europe. These include regional, economic, and social inequalities; lagging and backward regions; and constricted flows of labour. This book provides identification, comparison, analysis and discussion of regional development problems in Eastern and Western Europe. It discusses the latest trends in regional policy, assesses their effectiveness and puts forward innovative thinking on the various issues and how they should be tackled in future.


Regional Economic Planning

Regional Economic Planning

Author: R. C. Jensen

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2017-09-05

Total Pages: 254

ISBN-13: 1351594443

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Originally published in 1979. Decision makers at all levels need sufficiently detailed information on regional economic structure in order to undertake consistent and comprehensive regional planning. A means is put forward here, elevating the impracticable regional input-output method, to that of an operational planning technique. This development represents a system which facilitates the examination both of the economic structure of individual regions in reasonable detail, and of the regional structure of the state economy. The technique, termed the Generation of Regional Input-Output Tables (GRIT), is designed for general use in the production of regional input-output tables, and other data sources contributing towards the holistic accuracy of the table, thereby providing accurate maximisation of input-output tables within a given budget constraint.


Regional Economic Development

Regional Economic Development

Author: Gordon C. Cameron

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2015-09-16

Total Pages: 163

ISBN-13: 1317370864

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First published in 1970, Regional Economic Development: The Federal Role examines the economic viability of depressed areas and regions. This book questions whether there is adequate justification, on national economic grounds, for Federal involvement with distressed area revitalisation and looks at the main guidelines for intervention in relation to typology of distressed areas. This title is an ideal resource for students interested in politics, macroeconomics, and federal policies concerning the revitalisation of distressed areas and economies.


Government Measures for the Promotion of Regional Economic Development

Government Measures for the Promotion of Regional Economic Development

Author: International Information Centre for Local Credit

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2013-03-14

Total Pages: 173

ISBN-13: 9401191379

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The International Information Centre for Local Credit, with the assistance of member banks, carries out investigations in different countries and publishes the results. The present study relates to the problem of the unequal economic, social and cultural development of different areas in the world. Particu larly since the second world war this problem has been recognized as being of major importance. While initially it was the differences in development between different countries which attracted almost all the attention, for a number of years now an increasing interest has been apparent in the differences in level of development between specific regions in individual countries. This growing realization of the problem with regard to the varying levels of development which could exist within one and the same country found expression, for instance, in the International Union of Local Authorities congress held at Tel Aviv in 1961, which was devoted to the task of local authorities in development areas. The increasing interest in these problems was also evidenced in other quarters, the Conference for Regional Economy of the European Economic Community being held in Brussels in the same year. From these conferences, and also from many other indications as well, it became clear that the problem of regional economic develop ment today stands high on the priority list of questions of policy for many governments and that in general there is a great need for infor mation on how the problem is being tackled in other countries.