Economic geography and the scaling of urban and regional income in India
Anand Sahasranaman, Luis M. A. Bettencourt

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the economic scaling of Indian districts and cities, revealing linear and superlinear patterns, and highlights the need for better urban economic data in India.
Contribution
It introduces a new dataset of Indian city GDPs based on district data and explores regional economic patterns using scaling analysis.
Findings
District GDP scales linearly with population
City GDP shows superlinear scaling with size
Distinct geographic economic patterns are identified
Abstract
We undertake an exploration of the economic income (Gross Domestic Product, GDP) of Indian districts and cities based on scaling analyses of the dependence of these quantities on associated population size. Scaling analysis provides a straightforward method for the identification of network effects in socioeconomic organization, which are the tell-tale of cities and urbanization. For districts, a sub-state regional administrative division in India, we find almost linear scaling of GDP with population, a result quite different from urban functional units in other national contexts. Using deviations from scaling, we explore the behavior of these regional units to find strong distinct geographic patterns of economic behavior. We characterize these patterns in detail and connect them to the literature on regional economic development for a diverse subcontinental nation such as India. Given…
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