The new
viewpoints in policy
Research
coincide with a trun in interest with respect to the most relevant economic
sectors. From a firm relocation point of view one could say that the sectors of
manufacturing industry wholesale and business services offices have left the
city in a soft of outward procession of which the order has been dictated by
the intensity of their land use. In the first post- war decades the interest in
industrial movement was of coures partly due packers and movers pune
and movers and packers pune
to the then
more dominaqne position of manufacturing industry in the employment structure.
But
manufacturinmng also was the most mobile sector of that period. For its growth
it needed space which was made available at specially developed industrial
sites in fact in most countries a new post- war phenomenon at the city friges
in suburban locations or in more distant development nodes at prices which were
affordable for this sector of which the more traditional branches need a large
acreage per worker.
Before long the wholesale sector followed the
industrial exodus and soon even outsized it. In the second half of the 1960s
the Amsterdam Bureau of Statistics already counted a number of emigrant
wholesale firms which was twice the number of emigrant industrial firms
Pellenbarg 1976. At that time change in the number of business services leaving
Amsterdam was still very modest but this was to change in the next decades.
The
multi- storey offices of the business services sector using their square miles
much more efficiently than ground floor facilities for production storage or
distribution kept their positions in the central parts of urban areas longer.
But in the course of the 1980s and 1990s they inserted in the urban overspill
process too and soon dominated it. Especially in the second part of the 1980s
when the economic recession was over a huge demand for new office space arose
catc``hing `up `the``` investment arrears of the past period. This lead to a
massive relocation of business services to business parks at city fringes and
in suburbs lining the urban beltways and growing in to the office corridors
which we now face aqlong most city entrances.
For
the Netherlands this process is doc`umented rather well in the so- called
Mutation balance system which has been set up by the `Union of Dutch Chambers
of Commerce VVK and described in a series of articles by Kemper and Pelle`nbarg
for a synopsis see Pwllenbarg and Kemper 1999. Table 1 presents the latest
available and published figures.
Packers and
Movers in Pune@http://packers-movers-pune.co.in
No comments:
Post a Comment