China isn't the world's most ferocious new economic competitor--the exploding east-coast corridor, from Beijing to Shanghai, is. India as a whole is not developing high-tech industries and attracting jobs, but the booming mega-region stretching from Bangalore to Hyderabad is. Across the world, in fact, nations don't spur growth so much as dynamic regions--modern versions of the original "megalopolis," a term coined by the geographer Jean Gottman to identify the sprawling Boston-New York-Washington economic power corridor in the united states.
The New Megas are the real economic organizing units of the world, producing the bulk of its wealth, attracting a large share of its talent and generating the lion's share of innovation. They take shape as powerful complexes of multiple cities and suburbs, often stretching across national borders--forming a vast expanse of trade, transport, innovation and talent. Yet, though the rise of regions has been apparent for more than a decade, no one has collected systematic information on them--not the World Bank, not the IMF, not the United Nations, not the global consulting firms.
That's why my team and I set about building a world map of the New Megas shaped by satellite images of the world at night, using light emissions to identify the outlines of each region, and additional data in categories such as population and economic growth to chart their relative peak strengths and dynamism. The result is the topographical maps you see above.
The maps make it clear that the global economy takes shape around perhaps 20 great Megas--half in the United States and the rest scattered throughout the world. These regions are home to just 10 percent of total world population, 660 million people, but produce half of all economic activity, two thirds of world-class scientific activity and three quarters of global innovations. The great urbanologist Jane Jacobs was the first to describe why megalopolises grow. When people cluster in one place, they all become more productive. And the place itself becomes much more productive, because collective creativity grows exponentially. Ideas flow more freely, are honed more sharply and can be put into practice more quickly. Later, Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Lucas dubbed these forces "human capital externalities," and explained why they seem to override "the usual economic forces," like prices: "What can people be paying Manhattan or downtown Chicago rents for, if not to be around other people?