01019pab a2200133 454500008004000000100002300040245004900063260000900112300001200121362000800133520069600141650001700837773003100854180718b2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aMcGrath, Daniel T. aMore evidence on the spatial scale of cities c2005 ap.1-10. aJul aThis study re-examines the 1983 study by Brueckner and Fansler that empirically estimated the determinants of urbanized land areas, regressing land area on population, income, transportation costs, and agricultural land values. This study, however, utilizes a larger, more comprehensive data set of metropolitan statistical areas over a longer period of time. The estimation results, consistent with Bruecker and Fansler, confirm that the simple monocentric model is empirically robust and that the standard economic factors identified by urban economic theory explain the majority of spatial variation in the sizes the largest US metropolitan regions over the post-war period. - Reproduced. aUrbanization aJournal of Urban Economics