1 / 11

City Vitals: How Do We Measure the Success of Cities?

CEOs for Cities 2011 Fall National Meeting. City Vitals: How Do We Measure the Success of Cities?. October 11, 2011 Robert Weissbourd. Data for What Purposes?. Strategic - driven by desired outcomes Quality not Quantity - “answers, not data”

qamra
Download Presentation

City Vitals: How Do We Measure the Success of Cities?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CEOs for Cities 2011 Fall National Meeting City Vitals: How Do We Measure the Success of Cities? October 11, 2011 Robert Weissbourd

  2. Data for What Purposes? • Strategic - driven by desired outcomes • Quality not Quantity - “answers, not data” • User Driven - no ‘data dumps’; no ‘map madness’ • User Friendly - task and market oriented • Customized - specialized to user needs and systems • Current - up-to-date, recurring • Standardized - broad coverage and usability Translating Research to Practice: Determining the Right Information Resources to Drive Change

  3. Metropolitan Business Planning EnhanceRegionalConcentrations Increase SpatialEfficiency DeployHuman CapitalAligned withJob Pools Leverage Points for Sustainable and Inclusive Prosperity DevelopInnovation-EnablingInfrastructure Create EffectivePublic & CivicCulture & Institutions

  4. Similar view of importance and function of innovation; many overlapping metrics Possible additional factors Business Dynamics Metrics: Churn, employment turnover Research and Development Metrics: Academic R&D expenditures DEGREE OF OVERLAP( %)

  5. Heavy overlap, more exclusive emphasis on networks/connections rather than broader efficiency of moving people, goods, ideas • Possible additional factors: • Transit Accessibility • Jobs-Housing Mismatch • Density

  6. Except for citizen engagement, less focus on the institutional environment for economic success • Possible additional factors: • Government Fragmentation • Tax-Value Proposition • Governance

  7. Agreement on importance of human capital; different understanding of drivers/practice • Possible additional factors: • Alignment with Job Creation/Market Demand • Labor Market Efficiency • Job Structure (middle skills) and Mobility

  8. Different view of role, and particularly cause and effect, with respect to amenities. • Additional factors important on margins (and intra-metro): • Good Housing and Safety Proposition • Retail Services • Access to Job Centers

  9. Limited focus on the production side of the economy (harder to reduce to metrics); some similar top line metrics • Possible additional factors: • Productivity and GRP • Growth in Concentrated Industries and Functions • Specializations in Emerging Knowledge Sectors

  10. CEOs for Cities 2011 Fall National Meeting DISCUSSION October 11, 2011 Robert Weissbourd

  11. It’s not the Chicken or the Egg – It’s the Incubator High HC Occupations Knowledge Functions Productive Industries IT’S ABOUT PRODUCTIVITY Knowledge Workers Active Human Capital Industry To Attract Knowledge Workers, Build an Economy Characterized by High-Human Capital Occupations and Functions

More Related