Coordinated Development Evaluation of Population–Land–Industry in Counties of Western China: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Overview of the Study Area
2.2. Data Sources
2.3. Construction of County Urbanization Index System
- Urbanization of population. Population is the core element of urbanization, its essence is the transfer of a population’s economic activities from primary industry to secondary and tertiary industry. On the one hand, population is regarded as the labor force and the builder of urbanization [46]. On the other hand, population is regarded as the main body of resource consumption for the study of regional population carrying capacity [1]. The proportion of the non-agricultural population is usually used to reflect the urbanization level of the population [47]. Specifically, the number of employees in the secondary and tertiary industries in rural areas could indicate the urbanization level. As the basic population management system in Chinese society, the household registration system was linked with the resource allocation [48]. The household registration system, which was implemented for a long time, limited the two-way flow of rural labor force [49]. Therefore, we use the size and density of the household registration population to reflect the size of the county population, and the proportion of employees in secondary and tertiary industries to reflect the distribution structure of the population in production.
- Urbanization of land. Land is the most important space carrier of urbanization [50]. A large number of studies have explored the law of the coordinated development of population and land. The measurements of existing studies mainly used the urban built-up area [20,51] reflecting land urbanization However, unlike the urban area, there is large-scale agricultural land that is not allowed to be developed by policy in rural areas. Hence, the index of built-up areas being replaced by non-agricultural areas in county urbanization is examined in this study. We chose administrative areas to measure the basic scale of land urbanization, and used the area of facility agriculture and non-agriculture [52] to describe the spatial structure of county land urbanization.
- Urbanization of industry. Per capita GDP is an important indicator widely used in the existing literature to reflect regional economic and industrial development [53,54,55]. The number of industrial enterprises is the most intuitive manifestation of a county’s economy [56]. Considering that the urbanization of a county’s industry takes the development of township industry as the main mode, we used the number of industrial enterprises to reflect the scale of the county’s industry. Furthermore, the urbanization of a county redistributes the proportions of primary, secondary, and tertiary industries [57]. We used the proportion of primary, secondary, and tertiary industries’ GDP to measure the county industrial structure.
2.4. Data Preprocessing and Data Standardization
- Determine indicator weight
- Robustness Analysis
2.5. Modeling
- Evaluation Function of Subsystem Development Level
- Coupling Degree Function
- Coupling Coordination Degree Function
3. Results
3.1. Evaluation of Urbanization Development
3.1.1. Comprehensive Development Evaluation of Urbanization
3.1.2. Separate Evaluation on Urbanization of Population, Land and Industry
3.2. Evaluation of Population–Land–Industry Coupling Coordination Degree
3.2.1. Temporal-Spatial Characteristics of Population–Land–Industry Coupling Coordination
Temporal Characteristics
Spatial Characteristics
3.2.2. Analysis of Dual Coupling Relationship between Population, Land, and Industry
Analysis of Population–Land Coupling Coordination
Analysis of Land–Industry Coupling Coordination
Analysis of Population–Industry Coupling Coordination
3.3. Evaluation of Urbanization Development in Shaanxi Counties
4. Discussion
- Taking 2016 as the boundary, county urbanization in Shaanxi Province could also be divided into the stages of “Increment” and “Quality Improvement”, which is consistent with the overall development characteristics of China’s "stable rising peiod". Before 2016, both the comprehensive development level of urbanization and the coordination degree of population, land, and industry showed a rapid rising feature. In this stage, the rapid economic expansion was achieved through factor agglomeration. From 2016 to now, the development of county urbanization in Shaanxi entered a stable rising period, characterized by pursuing the coordinated development of various elements. This feature in the urbanization of counties was consistent with the development characteristics of China from the incremental stage of the 12th Five-Year Plan period to the quality improvement stage of the 13th Five-Year Plan period. After entering the 13th Five-Year Plan period, the county economic growth slowed down, and more attention was paid to structural adjustment and quality improvement, which are so-called “new development concepts”. These are new development ideas in China proposed by Xi Jinping, which are characterized by innovation, coordination, green, openness, and sharing with pursuing high-quality development. The new development concept is strategic, and programmatic in a longer period. Therefore, after the year of 2016, the urbanization of China entered the stage of “Quality Improvement”. In the quality improvement stage, coordination is based on increments. The coupling coordination degree of population, land, and industry and the trend of comprehensive urbanization level are synchronized, which shows that increment and quality improvement cannot be strictly distinguished in the process of economic development. The coupling coordination degree was not adjusted separately, but based on the factor agglomeration, and each subsystem gradually adjusted to be more coordinated in the process of factor agglomeration. Therefore, factor agglomeration could not be neglected in the stage of economic upgrading. County high-quality urbanization still needs to take measures to achieve the agglomeration effect of population, capital, and industry as the precondition, give full play to the growth potential, maintain a reasonable growth rate, and coordinately realize the improvement in quality and expansion of quantity.
- In general, the urbanization development in counties of Shaanxi Province presents the characteristics of a “core-edge” circle structure, and the radiation effect of central cities was significant. Both the urbanization development level and coupling coordination degree of population and industry subsystems showed the differential sequence circle distribution of Xi’an as the core city. Xianyang, Weinan, Baoji comprised the second echelon, and Yan’an, Ankang consistuted the last. Among them, the circle structure of population urbanization was more obvious than that of industry urbanization, which indicated that central cities played an obvious radiation effect in industry urbanization, but the development of population urbanization was still in the siphon stage. Due to the effect of the circle structure, county urbanization in Shaanxi Province shows obvious differences between the Guanzhong area, Northern, and Southern Shaanxi region. First of all, the Guanzhong area presented the characteristics of “strong development and strong coordination”. The overall level of county urbanization development in the Guanzhong area was obviously high, and the coupling coordination of population, land, and industry was also higher. Population agglomeration and economic development promoted and coordinated each other, showing good development and coordination characteristics. However, land resources were the constraints of the development of Guanzhong area. To strengthen development, we need to strengthen the regional planning and enhance the intensive use of land resources. Secondly, the spatial differentiation of Northern Shaanxi was obvious. Shenmu City had the best population–land–industry coordination level. Due to its pulling effect, the comprehensive urbanization development level of Northern Shaanxi was relatively high. However, at the same time, the county urbanization of Yan’an city was at a disadvantage, and the regional gap was huge within Northern Shaanxi. Finally, Southern Shaanxi presents the feature of “weak level coordination”—that is, the level of urbanization development was general, forming a relatively low level of coordinated development.
- The main driving force of urbanization in Western counties was industry agglomeration, and population hollowing was the restricting factor of county development. The development level of industry urbanization in counties was much higher than that of population and land urbanization. It could be seen that industry agglomeration of initial scale has formed in China’s Western counties. In recent years, the government planned to move the large-scale manufacturing industry to small towns in the central and western regions, and guided industries to form cluster in the counties through financial inclination. For example, Shaanxi provincial government introduced the policy of accelerating the development of county industrial concentration areas and industrial parks in 2018. One of the important tasks of the Development and Reform Commission in 2020 was the construction of the county industrial park to guide the industrial agglomeration of counties. Urbanization could be driven by population, technology, industry, and land. As a large part of county land is agricultural land, unlike urbanization in cities, county could not undergoes urbanization through expanding urban construction. At the same time, simply leading the urbanization level through land exploitation also deviated from the requirement of high-quality urbanization being intensive and efficient and the original purpose of being people-oriented [62,63]. In the case of relatively insufficient population agglomeration, township industry was the main driving force of urbanization in the Western counties of China. Generally, industry development can promote population agglomeration [20,64]. However, at present, the urbanization level of industry is much higher than that of population. This indicates that although county industry agglomeration achieved an initial effect, the county production and living space construction did not reach the level to attract population agglomeration. County infrastructure, public services, and other comprehensive services’ capacity was inadequate, which reduced the attractiveness for the population. Therefore, in order to promote further development of county urbanization, the government should direct its financial expenditure to public facilities, such as county infrastructure, human settlement environment, public service construction, etc. Attracting population occurs through improving county life quality, thus promoting the improvement in the urbanization level.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Target Layer (A) | Factor Layer (B) | Indicator Layer (C) | Unit | Direction | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Development Level of County Urbanization (A) | Population (B1) | Scale | Population Size (C1) | + | |
Population Density (C2) | Person/km2 | + | |||
Structure | Proportion of Non-Agricultural Employees (C3) | % | + | ||
Land (B2) | Scale | Administrative Area (C4) | km2 | + | |
Structure | Non-Agricultural Land Area (C5) | km2 | + | ||
Facility Agriculture Covered Area (C6) | km2 | - | |||
Industry (B3) | Scale | Per Capita GDP (C7) | Yuan | + | |
Number of Industrial Enterprises (C8) | + | ||||
Structure | Proportion of Primary Industry in GDP (C9) | % | - | ||
Proportion of Secondary Industry in GDP (C10) | % | + | |||
Proportion of Tertiary Industry in GDP (C11) | % | + |
City | Entropy Weight Method (Ranking) | Maximum Method (Ranking) | Minimum Method (Ranking) | Average Method (Ranking) | Rank Method (Ranking) | Average Value of Ranking | Final Ranking | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
XI’AN | 0.837 (1) | 0.860 (1) | 71.676 (2) | 1.878 (1) | 1.706 (4) | 1.8 | 1 | 1 |
XIANYANG | 0.742 (6) | 0.769 (6) | 61.126 (3) | 1.516 (4) | 1.463 (7) | 5.2 | 5 | 1.25 |
BAOJI | 0.738 (7) | 0.765 (7) | 32.828 (6) | 1.432 (5) | 1.613 (6) | 6.2 | 6 | 1 |
WEINAN | 0.772 (3) | 0.797 (3) | 196.580 (1) | 1.806 (2) | 1.338 (10) | 3.8 | 3 | 2.25 |
TONGCHUAN | 0.697 (10) | 0.724 (10) | 14.699 (10) | 1.229 (10) | 1.369 (9) | 9.8 | 10 | 0.25 |
YAN’AN | 0.707 (9) | 0.734 (8) | 49.783 (4) | 1.319 (9) | 1.740 (3) | 6.6 | 7 | 3 |
HANZHONG | 0.749 (5) | 0.774 (5) | 20.559 (9) | 1.414 (7) | 1.452 (8) | 6.8 | 8 | 2.25 |
YULIN | 0.784 (2) | 0.810 (2) | 40.425 (5) | 1.602 (3) | 1.887 (2) | 2.8 | 2 | 1 |
ANKANG | 0.717 (8) | 0.744 (9) | 31.031 (7) | 1.329 (8) | 1.625 (5) | 7.4 | 9 | 1.25 |
SHANGLUO | 0.751 (4) | 0.776 (4) | 24.558 (8) | 1.429 (6) | 2.048 (1) | 4.6 | 4 | 1.75 |
Development Mode | Low Coordination | Moderate Coordination | High Coordination |
---|---|---|---|
Population -Land -Industry coupling coordination | Yongshou, Changwu, Chunhua, Qianyang, Linyou, Taibai, Tongguan, Yijun, Yanchuan, Ganquan, Huanglong, Liuba, Foping, Mizhi, Wubao, Zhenping | Gaoling, Guyi, Lantian, Zhouzhi, Sanyuan, Jingyang, Qianxian, Liquan, Wugong, Xingping, Binzhou, Fengxiang, Qishan, Fufeng, Mei, Longxian, Fengxian, Huazhou, Heyang, Chengcheng, Baishui, Fuping, Hancheng, Huayin, Yaozhou, Ansai, Yanxian, Zichang, Zhidan, Wuqi, Fuxian, Luochuan, Yichuan, Huangling, Nanzheng, Chenggu, Yang, Xixiang, Mianxian, Ningqiang, Lueyang, Zhenba, Hengshan, Fugu, Suide, Jia, Qingjian, Zizhou, Hanyin, Shiquan, Ningshan, Ziyang, Langao, Pingliy, Xunyang, Baihe, Shangzhou, Luonan, Danfeng, Shangnan, Shanyang, Zhen’an, Zhashui | Chang’an, Chencang, Dali, Pucheng, Jingbian, Dingbian, Shenmu |
Population–Land Coordination lag type | Yongshou, Changwu, Chunhua, Qianyang, Linyou, Taibai, Tongguan, Baishui, Yijun, Yanchuan, Ganquan, Huanglong, Huangling, Liuba, Foping, Mizhi, Wubao, Qingjian, Shiquan, Ping | ||
Land–Industry Coordination lag type | Chang’an, Jingyang, Qianxian, Liquan, Yongshou, Changwu Chunhua, Wugong, Xingping, Binzhou, Qishan, Fufeng, Mei, Qianyang, Huazhou, Tongguan, Chengcheng, Baishui, Fuping, Huayin, Yijun, Foping, Mizhi, Wubao, Zhenping, Baihe | ||
Population–Industry Coordination lag type | Qianyang, Linyou, Fengxian, Taibai, Yijun, Ansai, Yanchuan, Zhidan, Wuqi, Ganquan, Fuxian, Luochuan, Yichuan, Huanglong, Huangling, Liuba, Foping, Wubao, Ningshan, Langao, Zhenping Zhashui |
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Niu, J.; Du, H. Coordinated Development Evaluation of Population–Land–Industry in Counties of Western China: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1983. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041983
Niu J, Du H. Coordinated Development Evaluation of Population–Land–Industry in Counties of Western China: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province. Sustainability. 2021; 13(4):1983. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041983
Chicago/Turabian StyleNiu, Jingkun, and Haifeng Du. 2021. "Coordinated Development Evaluation of Population–Land–Industry in Counties of Western China: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province" Sustainability 13, no. 4: 1983. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041983
APA StyleNiu, J., & Du, H. (2021). Coordinated Development Evaluation of Population–Land–Industry in Counties of Western China: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province. Sustainability, 13(4), 1983. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041983