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A global city or world city is a city deemed to be an important node point in the global economic system. The concept comes from geography and urban studies and rests on the idea that globalisation can be understood as largely created, facilitated and enacted in strategic geographic locales according to a hierarchy of importance to the operation of the global system of finance and trade. The most complex of these entities is the "global city," whereby the linkages binding a city have a direct and tangible effect on global affairs through more than socio-economic means, with influence in terms of culture, or politics.Sassen, Saskia - The global city: strategic site/new frontier The terminology of "global city", as opposed to megacity, is thought to have been first coined by Saskia Sassen in reference to London, New York and Tokyo in her 1991 work The Global City.Sassen, Saskia - The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo. (1991) - Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-07063-6 Today, the term is often associated with the Globalization and World Cities Study Group and Network based at the geography department of Loughborough University, which aims to provide a categorization and ranking of world cities.

Contents


General characteristics

World City status is seen as beneficial, and because of this many groups have tried to classify and rank which cities are seen as \'world cities\' or \'non-world cities\'. Although there is a general consensus upon leading world cities, GaWC Research Bulletin 5, GaWC, Loughborough University, 28 July 1999 the criteria upon which a classification is made can affect which other cities are included.

Studies

GaWC Inventory of World Cities, 1999

An attempt to define and categorise world cities was made in 1999 by the Globalization and World Cities Study Group and Network (GaWC), based primarily at Loughborough University in Loughborough, Leicestershire, England. The roster was outlined in the GaWC Research Bulletin 5 and ranked cities based on provision of "advanced producer services" such as accountancy, advertising, finance and law, by international corporations. The GaWC inventory identifies three levels of world cities and several sub-ranks.

Note that this roster generally denotes cities in which there are offices of certain multinational companies providing financial and consulting services rather than other cultural, political, and economic centres. There is a schematic map of GaWC cities at their website.The World According to GaWC, GaWC, Loughborough University

Alpha world cities / full service world citiesInventory of World Cities, GaWC, Loughborough University

Beta world cities / major world cities

Gamma world cities / minor world cities

Evidence of world city formation

Strong evidence
Some evidence
Minimal evidence

GaWC Leading World Cities, 2004

An attempt to redefine and recategorise leading world cities was made by GaWC in 2004.

Global Cities Leading World Cities, GaWC, Loughborough University

Well rounded global cities
  1. Very large contribution: London and New York City.
    Smaller contribution and with cultural strengths: Los Angeles, Paris, and San Francisco.
  2. Incipient global cities: Amsterdam, Boston, Chicago, Madrid, Milan, Moscow, Toronto.
Global niche cities - specialised global contributions
  1. Financial: Hong Kong, Singapore and Tokyo.
  2. Political and social: Brussels, Geneva and Washington, D.C.

World Cities

Subnet articulator cities
  1. Cultural: Berlin, Copenhagen, Melbourne, Munich, Oslo, Rome, Stockholm.
    Political: Bangkok, Beijing, Vienna.
  2. Social: Manila, Nairobi, Ottawa.
Worldwide leading cities
  1. Primarily economic global contributions: Frankfurt, Miami, Munich, Osaka, Singapore, Sydney, Zurich
  2. Primarily non-economic global contributions: Abidjan, Addis Ababa, Atlanta, Basel, Barcelona, Cairo, Denver, Harare, Lyon, Manila, Mexico City, Mumbai, New Delhi, Shanghai.

Other criteria

The GaWC list is based on specific criteria and, thus, may not include other cities of global significance or elsewhere on the spectrum. For example, cities with the following:

Selected criteria

Rank Population of city (proper) Population of metropolitan area Percentage foreign born Expatriate cost of living Metro systems by annual passenger ridership Top 10 rail systems by length Annual passenger air traffic in a single airport http://www.aci.aero/aci/aci/file/Press%20Releases/2007_PRs/PR_180707_TOP10.pdf Number of billionaires (US Dollars)INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE WEALTH MANAGEMENTPDF (136 KiB), International Financial Services, December 2004 Forbes reports billionaire boom, BBC, 10 March 2006500 richest in Russia, Finance Magazine, published by RBC. February 2006. Gross Metropolitan Product (Total output; not per capita) PriceWaterhouseCoopers, "UK Economic Outlook, March 2007", page 5. "Table 1.2 – Top 30 urban agglomeration GDP rankings in 2005 and illustrative projections to 2020 (using UN definitions and population estimates)" (PDF). Retrieved on 2007-03-09.
1 Mumbai Tokyo Miami Moscow Tokyo New York City Atlanta New York City Tokyo
2 Karachi Mexico City Toronto London Moscow London Chicago Los Angeles New York City
3 Delhi Seoul Los Angeles Seoul New York City Tokyo London Moscow Los Angeles
4 São Paulo New York City Vancouver Tokyo Seoul Seoul Tokyo London Chicago
5 Shanghai São Paulo New York City Hong Kong Mexico City Madrid Los Angeles Hong Kong Paris
6 Moscow Mumbai Singapore Osaka Paris Moscow Dallas Chicago London
7 Seoul Delhi Sydney Geneva London Paris Paris San Francisco Osaka/Kobe/Kyoto
8 Istanbul Shanghai Abidjan Copenhagen Hong Kong Mexico City Frankfurt Paris Mexico City
9 Mexico City Jakarta London Zürich Osaka Hong Kong Beijing Dallas Philadelphia
10 Tokyo Moscow Paris Oslo/New York City São Paulo Chicago Denver Tokyo Washington, D.C.

See also

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Global City

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