dr martin sokol canterbury christ church university [email protected]

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Dr Martin Sokol Canterbury Christ Church University [email protected] The polycentric metropolis hypothesis and knowledge-intensive business services (KIBS): The case of a banking and financial services sector in the Greater Dublin region IGU – Urban Commission Canterbury, 2011

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IGU – Urban Commission Canterbury, 2011. The polycentric metropolis hypothesis and knowledge-intensive business services (KIBS): The case of a banking and financial services sector in the Greater Dublin region. Dr Martin Sokol Canterbury Christ Church University - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Dr Martin SokolCanterbury Christ Church University

[email protected]

The polycentric metropolis hypothesis and knowledge-intensive

business services (KIBS):

The case of a banking and financial services sector in the Greater Dublin region

IGU – Urban Commission Canterbury, 2011

Page 2: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

my paper...

• networks of firms, but focus on :• knowledge-intensive business services (KIBS)

[advanced producer services – APS] specifically: banking/finance

• scale: metropolitan• no big data sets (they don’t exist): interviews x25

• case study: Dublin• hypothesis: polycentric metropolis

Page 3: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Polycentric metropolis hypothesis

Big cities / metrop. polycentric city-regions

Page 4: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Polycentric metropolis hypothesis

Big cities / metrop. polycentric city-regions• Inevitable

• Desirable

Page 5: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Polycentric metropolis hypothesis

Big cities / metrop. polycentric city-regions• Inevitable– ICT rev., globalisation, knowledge economy...

• Desirable

Page 6: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Polycentric metropolis hypothesis

Big cities / metrop. polycentric city-regions• Inevitable– ICT rev., globalisation, knowledge economy...

• Desirable– more balanced (fairer) development– more econ. efficient– more environ. sustainable

[solving old dilemma: equity vs. efficiency?]

Page 7: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Debate / consensus

Polycentric urban structures are indeed emerging?• Scott et al. (2001): multiclustered agglomerations• Sassen (2001): new geographies of centrality• Castells (1989): multinuclear spatial structures• Hall (1999): networked urban region,

multi-core metropolis• Hall and Pain (2006): polyopolis, polycentric mega-

city region, polycentric metropolis

Page 8: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Significant...urban transformation:

Page 9: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Significant...urban transformation:

• new economy new spatial organisation

• monocentric industrial city post-industrial polycentric city-region

New urban reality? End of city as we know it?

Beyond cities?

Page 10: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Key drivers

ICTs plus...

• KIBS (knowledge-intensive business services) (banking and finance, insurance, legal service, engineering, accounting, consultancy and other business services)

• APS (Advanced producer services)• FIRE (Finance, Insurance, Real Estate)

Page 11: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Castells (Informational City)• social organisation spatial form • informational economy new spatial logic• informational mode of development• driven by large scale information-processing organisations• information-intensive industries = KIBS• ICT ‘complex, hierarchical, diversified organisational structure’• different parts: linked by ICTs = ‘space of flows’

Page 12: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Castells (Informational City)• complex spatial structure: simultaneous centralisation and decentralisation’ • neither centralisation nor decentralisation is dominant • decentralisation:

(1) Inner city suburbs (of metropolitan areas)(2) Metro non-metro areas / small cities(3) Between regions

• Informational Cities = ‘multifunctional, multinuclear spatial

structures’

Page 13: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Peter Hall• Operationalised @ metro scale:• “Polycentric mega-city region”• London / Greater South East England• [see also Dan’s lecture]

Page 14: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Peter Hall

• “extended decentralisation [of KIBS] from large central cities to adjacent smaller ones”

(Hall and Pain, 2006, 3)

• “outward diffusion [of KIBS] from major cities to smaller cities”

(Hall and Pain, 2006, 12)

• Hope for peripheral hinterland urban centres (coming out of the shadow of a giant)?

Page 16: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Irish team: Greater Dublin Region

Page 17: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Irish team: Greater Dublin Region

Metro area

Page 18: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Irish team: Greater Dublin Region

mono-centric poly-centric

Page 19: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Regional Studies, vol. 42 (8) ...

Page 20: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Source: Sokol et al. (2008)

monocentric !

Page 21: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Source: Sokol et al. (2008)

monocentric !

Why?

Page 22: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Why?

• Need to understand the dynamics of individual KIBS sectors

Page 23: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Why?

• Need to understand the dynamics of individual KIBS sectors

• Banking & finance

Page 24: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Why?

• Need to understand the dynamics of individual KIBS sectors

• Banking & finance the most important sector ‘industry’ on its own right

(in fact, probably more than that!)

the biggest propensity to decentralise...

Page 25: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Source: Sokol et al. (2008)

Banking & finance

Page 26: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

But...

Banking & finance:complex ‘industry’

complex division of labourcomplex geographies / spatial organisation

complex spatial dynamics

Page 27: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Growth and Change, vol. 38 (2) ...

Page 28: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

But...

Banking & finance:complex ‘industry’

complex division of labourcomplex geographies / spatial organisation

complex spatial dynamics

Polycentric metropolis hypothesis ?

Page 29: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Banking & finance:Polycentric metropolis hypothesis

in theory...

Page 30: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Banking & finance

• Not 1 sector, but 2 sectors....A – domestic bankingB – international financial services

• very different functions• very different geographies & spatial dynamics

(although some overlaps / similarities...)

in practice...

Page 31: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

domestic banking• Bank of Ireland, AIB, Ulster Bank, Permanent TSB, National Irish

Bank, Anglo-Irish Bank...• Serving (mostly) domestic market / HO in Dublin

• Centralisation of functions back-office (e.g. cheque processing, credit checks, loans, credit cards) & front-office (telephone/internet banking)

Page 32: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

domestic banking• Bank of Ireland, AIB, Ulster Bank, Permanent TSB, National

Irish Bank, Anglo-Irish Bank...• Serving (mostly) domestic market / HO in Dublin

• Centralisation of functions back-office (e.g. cheque processing, credit checks, loans, credit cards) & front-office (telephone/internet banking) Decreasing polycentricity (slimming down branch network & regional offices) Spatial decentralisation of centralised functions to cheaper locations (call centre, card centre, IT support centre, Internet banking support centre, credit scoring unit)[geography: 2 hour drive from HO = favours locations within Greater Dublin region]

Page 33: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk
Page 34: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

international financial services• Funds; Banking/finance; Insurance• All major global players (Irish operation)• servicing (mostly) global clients• mostly in Dublin

Page 35: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

international financial services• Funds; Banking/finance; Insurance• All major global players (Irish operation)• servicing (mostly) global clients• mostly in Dublin• International Financial Services Centre (IFSC)

[Dublin’s version of London’s Docklands]• Est. 1987; 10% corporation tax (now 12.5%)• Ireland = cheaper location for big global players• they had to locate in Dublin’s IFSC to benefit• by 2005: 20,000 jobs• Limited decentralisation outside Dublin (but not necessarily in

Greater Dublin region)

Page 36: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk
Page 37: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk
Page 38: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Polycentric metropolis?

• complex picture• not easy to foresee, but so far: • no clear tendency towards polycentric

metropolis• centripetal forces > centrifugal forces• if decentralisation: sub-ordinate functions• no sign of balanced (polycentric) development• Dublin – continued dominance

Page 39: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Further complications

• ‘indirect’ effects of finance (e.g. via lending to households, firms, property developers...)

• shaping urban structure (e.g. residential mortgages / suburbanisation - see also Markus Hesse’s paper; and/or speculative office development)

• also implications for the national economy...• “up to half of the banking system’s aggregate loan

book is now in the broadly defined property category” (Central Bank and FSA, 2005, 9)

Page 40: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Further complications

• crisis

Page 41: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Further complications

• crisis

Page 42: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Further complications

• crisis

The emergence of a polycentric metropolis in Dublin:

uncertain & problematic

Page 43: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

Thank you

Page 44: Dr Martin  Sokol Canterbury  Christ Church University martin.sokol@canterbury.ac.uk

ABSTRACT

Martin SokolThe polycentric metropolis hypothesis and knowledge-intensive business services (KIBS): The case of a banking and financial services sector in the Greater Dublin region

This paper critically examines the hypothesis that polycentric structure is emerging out of urban transformations in and around European metropolitan city-regions. Knowledge-intensive business services (KIBS) are often seen as key drivers of this process - which many hope will result in a more balanced pattern of urban-regional development. The paper focuses on a banking and financial services sector which, among KIBS, displays perhaps the biggest propensity to decentralise from central business districts (CBD) of primate cities to smaller urban centres in the periphery of metropolitan regions. However, the case study of Greater Dublin region demonstrates that while banking and finance does show some decentralising tendencies, these may not necessarily lead to a more balanced polycentric city-regional development - not least because the tendency to locate the most valuable operations in the primate city (and especially in its CBD) remains strong.

36th Annual Conference of the International Geographical Union (IGU) – Urban Geography Commission–'Emerging Urban Transformations'

Urban Transformations: Exploring Local, Regional and Global City RegionsCanterbury Christ Church University

14 – 20 August 2011