This book analyses and compares the development paths of five major
cities in East and Southeast Asia since the early 1960s, including Ho
Chi Minh City, Jakarta, Manila, Seoul, and Shanghai. In examining these
five cases through a carefully crafted conceptual framework, the author
excavates an understanding of the dynamics that have enabled Seoul and
Shanghai to become highly competitive as major engines of economic
growth, while simultaneously accounting for why the other three cities
have faced numerous problems in terms of meeting their development
goals. Presenting both quantitative and qualitative data to trace the
course of changes between 1960 and 2015, the case studies curate six
possible explanations for the different cities' developmental
trajectories. The book considers the national development strategy
matters to the development of cities and positions the share of budget
revenue retained for cities' expenditure as critical. The author
demonstrates that consistently pursuing long-term strategies is
important, and that public entrepreneurship with powerful supporting
coalitions is vital. The book illustrates how master plans have played
limited roles in the building of cities, and that fragmented governments
are often at the root of the problems facing a city's development. This
book will be highly relevant to researchers in international and Asian
urban development.