Urbanization in Resource-Based County-Level Cities in China: A Case Study of New Urbanization in Wuan City, Hebei Province
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework and Literature Review
3. Material and Methods
3.1. Study Area and Data
3.2. Methodology
3.2.1. Urban–Rural Income Disparity Analysis—Theil Index
3.2.2. Industrial Structure and New Economic Drivers—Shift-Share Analysis
- Reference Share Component (N): How much the sector would have grown if it grew at the average rate of the reference region’s economy. This reflects the effect of general economic growth.
- Industry Mix (Structural) Component (P): The growth attributable to the sector’s specific growth rate at the reference level minus the general growth rate. A positive structural component means that the industry is a fast-growing sector in the broader economy (so having more of it is an advantage for the region).
- Regional Competitive Component (D): The residual growth due to the region’s own competitiveness in a sector, computed as the actual growth minus what would be expected from the reference growth for that sector. A positive competitive component indicates that Wuan outperforms the provincial average in that industry, suggesting local advantages (e.g., productivity, policy support, innovation).
- Reference share component: —growth of sector if it grew at Hebei’s overall rate.
- Industry mix (structural) component: —additional growth due to sector ’s provincial trend deviating from the average (structure effect).
- Regional competitive component: —growth due to Wuan’s competitive performance in sector .
3.2.3. Economic Growth Mechanism—Cobb–Douglas Production Function
3.2.4. Comprehensive Urbanization Level—Indicator System and Composite Index
4. Results
4.1. Urban–Rural Income Disparity Trends (2010–2022)
4.2. Industrial Sector Performance and Structural Change (2014–2022)
4.3. Contribution of Labor and Capital to Economic Growth
4.4. Comprehensive Urbanization Index Trajectory (2000–2022)
5. Discussion
5.1. Interpreting Wuan’s Urbanization Trajectory: Achievements and Persistent Challenges
5.1.1. Urban–Rural Income Convergence and Rural Vulnerability
5.1.2. Industrial Transformation: A Tale of Rebounding and Structural Inertia
5.1.3. The Labor-Intensive Growth Model at a Crossroads
5.1.4. Comprehensive Urbanization: A Trajectory of Stagnation Requiring Renewal
5.2. Strategic Pathways for High-Quality Urbanization in Wuan
5.2.1. Expanding Urban Frontiers: Incremental Population Urbanization
5.2.2. Enhancing Existing Communities: In Situ Urbanization of Stock Population
5.2.3. Cultivating Specialized Nodes: Development of Characteristic Small Towns
5.3. Implications and Future Directions for Wuan’s Urban Development
5.4. Situating Wuan in a Global Context: Comparative Perspectives on Resource City Transitions
5.4.1. Governance and Planning Models: From State Direction to Social Partnership
5.4.2. Economic Diversification Strategies: Upgrading Legacy vs. Forging New Paths
5.4.3. The Social Dimension: From Population Settlement to a “Just Transition” Framework
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Primary Indicator and Code | Secondary Indicator and Code | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|
Economic Dynamism (A) | Per capita GDP (A1) | 8.53 |
Share of industrial output in GDP (A2) | 7.08 | |
Share of the tertiary sector in GDP (A3) | 7.08 | |
Urban fixed asset investment growth rate (A4) | 6.08 | |
Population and Migration (B) | Overall population growth rate (B1) | 8.79 |
Urban population growth rate (B2) | 5.34 | |
Proportion of urban population in total population (B3) | 10.88 | |
Urban unemployment rate (B4) | 8.79 | |
Infrastructure (C) | Per capita urban road area (C1) | 5.62 |
Coverage of urban water supply (C2) | 5.62 | |
Coverage of urban gas supply (C3) | 5.62 | |
Number of public transit vehicles per 10,000 people (C4) | 3.65 | |
Living Environment (D) | Garbage treatment rate (D1) | 7.23 |
Per capita public green space (D2) | 3.62 | |
Green coverage ratio of the built-up area (D3) | 6.03 |
Component | Key Trend/Observation | |
---|---|---|
Primary | Share | Positive, steadily increasing |
Structural | Positive, grew slightly | |
Competitive | Remained around zero or very small | |
Secondary | Share | Negative (2014–2017), then positive and large (2018–2022) |
Structural | Mostly negative throughout the period | |
Competitive | Became positive and significant in later years (post-2018) | |
Tertiary | Share | Positive, growing each year |
Structural | Positive | |
Competitive | Became positive and grew in later years |
Factor Input | Estimated Output Elasticity | Implied Contribution to GDP Growth |
---|---|---|
Labor | β ≈ 0.75 | Dominant |
Capital | α ≈ 0.25 | Smaller |
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Hou, J.; Yu, D.; Song, H.; Zhang, Z. Urbanization in Resource-Based County-Level Cities in China: A Case Study of New Urbanization in Wuan City, Hebei Province. Sustainability 2025, 17, 6335. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146335
Hou J, Yu D, Song H, Zhang Z. Urbanization in Resource-Based County-Level Cities in China: A Case Study of New Urbanization in Wuan City, Hebei Province. Sustainability. 2025; 17(14):6335. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146335
Chicago/Turabian StyleHou, Jianguang, Danlin Yu, Hao Song, and Zhiguo Zhang. 2025. "Urbanization in Resource-Based County-Level Cities in China: A Case Study of New Urbanization in Wuan City, Hebei Province" Sustainability 17, no. 14: 6335. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146335
APA StyleHou, J., Yu, D., Song, H., & Zhang, Z. (2025). Urbanization in Resource-Based County-Level Cities in China: A Case Study of New Urbanization in Wuan City, Hebei Province. Sustainability, 17(14), 6335. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146335