From boom to crash: Spanish urban areas in a decade of changes (2001-2011)

Publication date

2020-07-14T12:14:23Z

2020-07-14T12:14:23Z

2016-04-05

2020-07-14T12:14:23Z

Abstract

This paper has two main aims: on the one hand, it provides an overview of recent metropolitan area population changes in Spain and assesses their spatial patterns through a typology, and on the other hand, it analyses the impact of the current economic crisis on the aforementioned trends. The main source used is the Padrón continuo, the local continuous registration system providing official data updated every year on 1 January. Regarding metropolitan area delimitation, we have decided to use that employed by the Atlas de las Áreas Urbanas de España and to situate the population threshold at 500,000 inhabitants. Fifteen urban areas satisfied the requirements. Therefore, this paper analyses, for the 2001-2011 decade, population growth and urban expansion in the 15 Spanish largest metropolitan areas. In the first phase, suburbanisation intensified while the areas simultaneously received significant international migration inflows. The latter compensated Spaniards' exit flows from core cities, which increased their population again. The economic crisis, which began in 2008, and its significant impact on the real estate sector, drew an end to this urban expansion and growth period, as it seems to have slowed Spanish metropolitan area growth and restrained suburbanisation dynamics. Consequently, in recent years, residential mobility has decreased and metropolitan areas have entered a new phase characterised by a reduction of both foreign immigration inflows and Spaniards' movements away from core cities. Therefore, with few exceptions, urban centres are currently once again gaining Spanish residents or at least have stopped losing them.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1177/0969776413498762

European Urban and Regional Studies, 2016, vol. 23, num. 2, p. 198-216

https://doi.org/10.1177/0969776413498762

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(c) Gil Alonso, Fernando et al., 2016

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