The Impact of Culture and Urban Life-Cycle on The Economic Development of City

Boskov, Tatjana and Kovacevski, Dimitar and Klicek, Tamara and Dimitrov, Nikola (2018) The Impact of Culture and Urban Life-Cycle on The Economic Development of City. IJIBM International Journal of Information, Business and Management, 10 (1). pp. 284-295. ISSN 2076-9202 (Print)/2218-046X (Online)

[thumbnail of IJIBM_Vol10No1_Feb2018 - 4.pdf]
Preview
Text
IJIBM_Vol10No1_Feb2018 - 4.pdf

Download (447kB) | Preview

Abstract

Cities are so relevant to modern economy and society and it is argued that their performance
determines the destiny of entire regions. Conversely, sustainable development requires that cities
themselves are sustainable (Jones and Watkins, 1996). Cities are the places where unbalance in the use of
resources is most evident (they consume more resources than they generate), but at the same time they are
the core of economic and societal innovation (Petrevska, 2012). One such aspect is culture. Culture is an
engine of social development and economic growth, but at the same time it may be affected or even
destroyed in the process. Sustainable urban development makes it necessary to strike a balance, achieving the maximum of development opportunities and preserving at the same time the assets and the intangible
elements that constitute the cultural identity of a city.
The paper focuses on the conceptualization and analysis of the effects of culture on the economic
development of City of Skopje. It moves from the recognition that culture is a key ingredient of
post-industrial, information-intensive economic activity. A culture-oriented economic development is
subject to strong endogenity, modifying continuously the original conditions that make places culturally
rich and viable as creative hubs (Landry, 2000). Thus COED is potentially short-lived and may bring to
irreversible changes in the urban environment: the erosion of social capital, the dispersion in space of
cultural activities and the consequent decreasing of clustering effects, and ultimately the fading of local
cultural identity and “uniqueness”. Urban policy should be careful to accompany the COED process
making sure that these limits are never reached. Physical and cultural planning, social and educational
policies, infrastructure projects and the implementation of innovative forms of governance and
networking may achieve these objectives, but the policy context is made fuzzier and more complex by the
unconventional nature of economic and social processes underlying cultural activities and creative
production.
From the reference to the COED model, cities can learn what should be the philosophy of initiatives in
the public realm, what results may be expected, and what is the time-horizon that needs to be adopted in
policy documents.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Social Sciences > Economics and business
Divisions: Faculty of Tourism and Business Logistics
Depositing User: Tatjana Boskov
Date Deposited: 06 Nov 2017 10:05
Last Modified: 06 Nov 2017 10:05
URI: https://eprints.ugd.edu.mk/id/eprint/18456

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item