Discussion Papers 2007.
Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization.
The Case of Central Europe. 18-51. p.
CASE STUDIES: THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF URBAN
AREAS: KEY FACTORS AND CHARACTERISTIC
FEATURES
The social structure of Hungarian urban areas:
key factors and characteristic features
The impacts of globalization on urban areas in Hungary
The socio-economic restructuring of Hungary in the 1990s, its integration into
global economy fostered the (regionally differentiated) development of major
urban areas only. This has been originated partially from the historic past and
partially from the mechanisms of global economy. The spatial structure of the
Hungarian economy was historically big city oriented, although in the state so-
cialist regime the development of big cities – by various instruments according to
the changing interests of the political system – was restricted by political inter-
ventions (administrative regulations, regional policy). Following the political and
economic reforms of the 1960s the socio-economic positions and the influential
power of major cities and county seats have significantly strengthened. A gov-
ernmental decree issued in 1970 turned large and medium-sized cities into the
driving forces of economic development and in this way the industrial plants with
modern technology and requiring highly trained labour were sited in these central
places. The decisional centres of industrial companies having strategic importance
in economic development were located in urban and metropolitan sites, while
their different branches and affiliates were settled in small towns and rural areas
(Barta, 2002, 64–65). As a result of these economic development projects large
cities after a successful political lobbying process won significant financial fund-
ing resources and planning support for their development.
The inflowing foreign direct investments from West-Europe in the 1990s were
almost exclusively targeted at joint ventures, stock companies and even small
enterprises seated – by regional determinations – in core areas (Barta, 1992).
These core areas (their management and societies) received them not only with a
warm welcome but granted several (including tax) benefits, and provided them
with labour culture of historical traditions, good infrastructure and skilled labour
force. Global economy initiated quick growth in the Budapest region, on the Bu-
dapest-Vienna axis, in the cities of West-Hungary (Gy r, Tatabánya, Székesfe-
hérvár and their environment). The development of other big cities of Hungary
(Pécs, Szeged, Debrecen) was less spectacular but still continuous (Enyedi, 1996).
18
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
North-Hungary, the eastern regions, the rural areas of the Hungarian Great Plain
and urban regions with strong energetic sector (coal mining, metallurgy) and the
settlements of the East Hungarian border zone once prospering from the benefits
of Hungarian-East-European economic relations were facing a socio-economic
crisis. The crisis was an outcome of the collapse of East-European markets, of the
bankruptcy of plants having sold their products on these markets, of the massive
redundancy of workers, of high unemployment and of the absence of capital re-
sources standing in the way of economic restructuring. However there were some
cities even in the crisis areas that were able to attract and settle down private
businesses and industrial plants that albeit were unable to save them from the
crisis but at least could stabilize their economy to a certain extent. In some cases
this could be achieved by the foreign direct investments of Eastern or West-Euro-
pean firms.
The spatial demands of global economy polarized the interaction between cit-
ies and their environment in a specific way. On the one hand – by breaking up the
hierarchical structures of the past – they changed and equalized the historically
asymmetrical relationship between cities and rural areas and between core and
peripheral areas. One of the reasons of changes is that global economy reached
not only city centres but urban peripheries as well. During the mid–1990s for
example industrial plants having been built as green field investment projects in
the urban area of Budapest and in Pest County preferably selected the agglomera-
tion zone or the satellite cities of Budapest such as Budaörs, Gödöll and Dun-
haraszti for their site (Dicházi–Matolcsi, 1997, 38). The site selection strategies of
transnational and multinational firms increased the land value of the urban pe-
ripheries of big cities and Budapest as well (Izsák, 2003).
The spatial demands of global economy create new dependencies as well in
the interaction between cities and their urban peripheries. The competitive, top
firms and financial centres with global positions and their regional (including
Central European) branches are favouring urban centres, capital cities and major
cities in their site selection policies while companies engaged rather in regional or
national markets are more inclined to site their headquarters in the urban periph-
ery of big cities or in small towns (Sassen, 2000, 26). The site selection policy of
foreign companies is determined by their economic importance and this trend can
clearly be seen in Hungary as well. The new researches are verifying that corpo-
rate management, the organisation of production and decisional functions are
rather linked to big cities of central role, while the routine and physical processes
of manufacturing are concentrated in their affiliates located in small towns and
rural settlements (Barta, 2002, 64–69). This kind of spatial division regenerates
the economic disparities between core areas and peripheries as well.
The spatial impacts of global economy are reflected by the new trends of urban
growth in Hungary such as urban sprawl, the dynamic growth of suburbanization,
19
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
the decreasing population of city centres and the increasing of suburban popula-
tion as their consequences. (The population of the urban areas involved in our
research decreased by 5% between 1993 and 2003. This ratio of decrease was
higher than the national average (1.6%). The greater part of decrease seems to
take place in cities. The growth of suburban population was 15.7% within the
same period culminating between 1998 and 2003 [Balázsné Varga, 2005]. 66% of
the Hungarian population lives in cities. The majority of Hungarian citizens –
following the major trends of Central-European urban societies – are not living in
big cities. For example 16% of the Czech, 14% of the Polish and 31% of the total
Hungarian citizens are living in big cities [Stenning, 2004]). The spreading of ur-
ban lifestyle raises new issues of social problems that are linked to urban sprawl
and suburbanization as well: such as car traffic and its environmental impacts,
with their damages for health, the physical and social erosion of central urban
quarters, the lessening of green areas, the social exclusion and the segregation of
urban societies, the increasing gap of socio-spatial differences. The further parts
of this paper are going to discuss these issues.
The characteristic features of the infrastructural and institutional
provision of urban areas in Hungary and their changes in time
Regional development was always heavily influenced by the availability of physi-
cal infrastructure and by the characteristics and potentials of regional and local
systems and networks of different services. Their major spatial differences always
played and and are still playing a major role in increasing and maintaining spatial
disparities and in regional and local competitiveness (Abonyiné Palotás, 2007).
The development and characteristic features of society and economy have vital
role in them but they are further influenced by several additional factors.
The networks of infrastructure and services are integrated into major nodes in
the vicinity of big cities but some of their elements have major impacts on re-
gional integrations, spatial and regional cohesion. Physical accessibility, the de-
velopment level of communication networks, higher education and health services
all belong to the category of key elements.
In our analysis we tried to assess those further elements and those socio-eco-
nomic aspects that are mostly responsible for the socio-economic disparities in
Hungary’s urban areas.
To accomplish this task we investigated how urban areas with their infra-
structural and institutional characteristics and with their spatial disparities, as an
outcome of certain outstanding socio-economic features, and the differences be-
20
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
tween big cities and their background settlements have been changed and what
further changes they are facing during the regime change.3
Physical accessibility
Railway services connecting Hungarian urban areas with their peripheries seem to
be the most suitable mode of transport. The average travel time between cities and
their nearest railway stations is eight minutes. The better than national average
travel time is explained by the fact that all Hungarian big cities are intersected by
a main railway route connecting them with some of their background settlements
as well. The city of Debrecen enjoys the most favourable location from this aspect
having good connections with the majority of its neighbour settlements. This is
accountable for the fact that the city is positioned at the meeting point of several
major railway routes; therefore the network provides connections to all directions.
The 36 minute average travel time from cities to their regional airports also
seems to be fairly short. From this aspect the airports of Nyíregyháza, Szeged and
Debrecen have the most favourable location as they are falling into their own
urban area’s territory. Their utilization ratio (except the airport of Debrecen) is
low yet but they have bright prospects for economic development. The airports of
Kecskemét, Székesfehérvár and Miskolc are situated at unfavourable geographi-
cal locations with much longer travel time than the national average. Of them
Székesfehérvár can the most easily tackle this problem but due to the financial
shortages of its investors the city has been trapped into a handicapped situation
during the competition of regional airports. Generally speaking after all the
shorter than ninety minutes travel time to regional airports from any points of all
urban areas seems to be appropriate.
There are greater differences between urban areas from the point of motorway
accessibility. The average travel time to motorways is 34 minutes in Hungary
which is much longer than the West-European average values but much better
than in East-Europe. The better than East-European results are resulting from the
motorway building projects of the past 4–5 years. The travel time values to mo-
torways are much better in the urban areas of Budapest, Gy r, Kecskemét and
Székesfehérvár, because all these cities are accessible by motorway and several of
their background settlements have also direct connections to these motorways.
This means that not only big cities but also several of their background settle-
ments are easily accessible by motorway. Recently the physical accessibility of
the urban areas of Szeged, Nyíregyháza and Debrecen has significantly improved
by cutting down the distance of these cities from motorways. In 2006 both Debre-
cen and szeged joined the Hungarian motorway network
3For tracking changes we defined three sampling dates. They were years 1993, 1998 and 2003.
21
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
We consider telecommunication services another determinating factor of spa-
tial disparities. The average provision level of urban areas by telecommunication
services has tripled between 1993 and 2003 but it is a bit worrying trend that the
average provision coverage of urban areas by fixed hone services is lagging be-
hind the national average by 15% (Figure 1).
Figure 1
The changing provision coverage of urban areas by fixed phone services
(2003/1993, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
The reason behind this is that the provision coverage of urban agglomerations
by fixed phone services is still lagging behind the national average (by 30%).
However an equalization process seems to shape up in this field as the value of
this lag-behind indicator was 120% in 1993. This is explained by the fact that in
the late 1990s the leading Hungarian fixed phone service provider (formerly
Matáv Rt today Magyar Telekom Távközlési Nyrt a part of Deutche Telekom)
could acomplish its concession projects only by connecting a great numer of
small settlements into its telecommunication network. Differences between urban
areas can be well-demonstrated by the fact that the coverage ratio of Budapest by
telecommunication services was by 60% higher than the national average in 2003
but the coverage ratio of big cities by telecommunication services is also exceed-
22
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
ing the national average. The reducing differences between Budapest and provin-
cial big cities in the coverage of telecommunication services is an indicator of the
quicker growth of telecommunication service in small and medium-sized towns
and in rural settlements.
The role of public Internet access points has significantly increased by the re-
cent improvement of e-administration services during the past two years. These
services are concentrated in urban areas and are available in all the settlements
involved in our research. Therefore they can be eliminated as factors of spatial
disparities. However only 53% of Hungary’s total settlements have such Internet
access facilities and just those settlements are suffring from the inadequate cover-
age of public Internet services that would need them the most due to their low
accessibility of Internet services at home.
Demography and housing
The 9 urban areas involved in our research are inhabited by 38% of Hungary’s
total population in 2003 (3.8 million people), but their population concentrating
force has significantly weakened between 1993 and 2003. This can be accounted
for the quickly dropping population of Budapest as a partial result of the otmigra-
tion of residents from the central parts into the agglomaration zone, albeit a minor
part of outmigrants settle down in other parts than the agglomeration zone. The
population drop rate of provincial urban areas is also exceeding the national aver-
age but still moderate, due to the increasing population of their background set-
tlements.
The population changes of urban areas between 1993 and 2003 created a huge
downfall in their core cities but a dynamic increase in their background settle-
ments (Figure 2).
Kecskemét was the only urban area increasing its population due to its special
structure of background settlements consisting of farmsteads4 and also to the
immigration of their residents into the city’s central urban quarters. (Living
conditions in farmsteads are lagging behind the average level and the faster urban
development of the nearby city makes these differences more spectacular between
the city and its environment). This was also a partial explanation in case of
Nyíregyháza why it could maintain its population decrease on minimal level and
the higher than the average natural birth-rate index was another counterbalancing
factor against their decreasing population tendencies. On the basis of the radically
dropping population in Budapest, Miskolc and Székesfehérvár and of the
increasing population in their background settlements we assume that the spatial
expansion of such a high number of inhabitants involves a wider circle of
4They are villages having a significant number of peasant houses with a farm in their peripheral
zone but within their administrative boundaries
23
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
settlements than their background ones. The population growth in background
settlements is highly sporadic, which is an indirect proof of increasing socio-
spatial inequalities – both on local level and between core-periphery relations.
The highest population growth was seen in the physically most easily accessible
settlements that do not necessarily mean the nearest geographical location to the
core city.
Figure 2 The changing number of permnent residents (2003/1993, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
The spatial distribution of people with university or college degree shows a
similar pattern to population changes but the differences in the intensity of these
changes between core and background settlements are even greater indicating
growing socio-economic inequalities between and within them (Figure 3). The
overall rate of residents with university or college degree within the group of resi-
dents aged over 7 in urban areas was by far below the national average in year
2001 (7,9 – 9,8%).5 The values by settlements varied between the extreme values
5It is very important to clear that this does not mean that inhabitants with university or college
degree are not concentrated in metropolitan areas. This is true only in the sense of their absolute
number values, albeit their ratio within the total number of population not in these areas is the
24
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
of 1.5 and 29.5. The settlements with the highest ratio of high-educated inhabi-
tants were located in the agglomeration zone of Budapest (Telki, Nagykovácsi,
Budakeszi, Solymár, Szentendre, Leányfalu, Budaörs, Budajen , Budapest),
while the least educated people – except for Nyíregyháza – are living in the back-
ground settlements of nearly all provincial big cities (mostly in Debrecen and
Pécs).
Figure 3
The changing ratio of citizens with university or college degree (2001/1990, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
This means that high-educated people are outmigrating from city centres in a
higher proportion than other social classes. The heterogenity of changes in ag-
glomeration settlements shows that the intensity of social changes may be much
differentiated depending on the local resources and living conditions they can
offer to local people. The growth rate of inhabitants with university or college
highest. Their higher than national average ratio in urban areas is the consquence of the higher
ratio of high-educated citizens living in provincial medium-sized and small towns and their
environment. This is particularly true for provincial university or college cities and their
environment (for example Veszprém, Sopron, Keszthely, Mosonmagyaróvár, Gyöngyös, Szombat-
hely, Békéscsaba, Zalaegerszeg, etc.). Another point is that very many jobs that big cities and their
peripheries can provide are attractive mostly for low-trained or unskilled labourers only.
25
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
degree is the most moderate in the urban areas of Kecskemét, Miskolc, Debrecen
and Nyíregyháza, possibly due to the moderate development progress of local
insitutes of higher education.
Housing differences, especially differences in the quantitative and qualitative
features of the newly built homes are very important indicators of social inequali-
ties. In urban areas the average – in relation to the total number of inhabitants –
number of newly built homes exceeded the national average in all the three sam-
pling years of our research. These development tendencies indicate that the
above-described differences also increased as in 1993 as 1.9 times more new
homes were built in urban areas than on national level while in year 2003 the
value of this multiplier was 2.1. This difference value in some urban areas is
positive with more than double values of the national average such as in the urban
areas of Budapest, Gy r and Pécs in 2003 but even in the urban areas of Székes-
fehérvár, Debrecen and Nyíregyháza they are still exceeding the national average.
The lowest figures of housing provision (showing a falling tendency during the
past ten years) have been registered in Miskolc, as a consequence of the city’s
lagging – and still ongoing – economic restructuring process.
In big cities housing indicators were below the national average in 1993 but
since 1998 they have been exceeding it. The most spectacular growth in housing
took place during the past five years which probably may have resulted from
building new gated residential communities. This increased the 10% housing ad-
vantage of big cities to 50%. Of the big cities we registered significant below
average values only in Székesfehérvár and Miskolc. In Miskolc as well a sin its
urban area low residential incomes are the most responsible for low housing val-
ues. In Székesfehérvár the late start of building gated residential communities and
the delay of social housing programme are the main reasons of low housing indi-
cators (in 2004 and 2005 the local government built new homes in high number).
In background settlements the ratio of new homes exceeded the national aver-
age in all the three sampling years. Of the background settlements of urban areas
the values registered int he urban areas of Budapest, Gy r and Pécs are exceeding
the national average by 250–300% indicating an increasing tendency of subur-
banization processes (our researches are indicating significant differences among
background settlements and some settlements have outstanding importance in
each urban area). But the housing values in the background settlements of the
urban area of Miskolc and Kecskemét, with the ratio of newly built homes are
below the national average.
Due to the above-described processes the changes in the number of new homes
were varying between urban areas and inside their territory as well between 1993
and 2003 (Figure 4). With the intensification of suburbanization, with the growth
of construction industry and with the increasing territory of local homebuilding
sites a significant overall growth has been registered in the number of new homes
26
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
in the urban areas of Gy r, Pécs, Szeged and Debrecen (over 300% in their total
territory), while this growth was moderate (150%) in the urban area and urban
environment of Kecskemét. Pécs is the only urban area with a lower growth rate
of new homes in the core city than in its environment. At the same time in the
urban areas of Budapest, Miskolc, Nyíregyháza and Székesfehérvár new home
buildings are more spectacular and more concentrated into agglomeration zones.
The impact of new home buildings on the growth of socio-spatial inequalities is
rather indirect as it is influenced by several other factors, such as incomes, infra-
structure, transport services and the changes and outcomes of other socio-
economic factors.
Figure 4 The changing number of newly built homes (2003/1993, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
Employment and businesses
Unemployment, after the full employment system of the socialist era, was a new
phenomenon in Hungary emerging after the regime change. It was in the deepest
crisis – amidst the economic transition – affecting settlements in varying scale
and size between 1992 and 1993. Since that time the employment indicators of
27
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Hungarian urban areas and their environment have significantly improved. Be-
tween 1993 and 2003 this was well illustrated by the positively changing figures
of unemployment and persistent unemployment data among active wage earners
(Figure 5; Csabina et al. 2005), and by the increasing ratio of active wage earners
in the age group of 15–74. (Figure 6). Since the late 1990s the unemployment
/employment ratio has positively shifted in favour of employment among active
wage earners and within the same age group the ratio of inactive population
dropped, while that of the active wage earners increased. By all means these ten-
dencies are equalising socio-economic differences in macroregions and in urban
areas but on the other hand as a result of some special social circumstances socio-
spatial differences between core areas and peripheries may further increase.
At present Budapest with its agglomeration zone, Gy r, Székesfehérvár and
their peripheries are in the most advantageous situation regarding employment
prospects as it is seen from the majority of absolute employment indicators as a
consequence of the high inflow of foreign direct investments. Miskolc, Szeged
and Nyíregyháza are in less favourable regarding employment due to the slow
progress of their economic restructuring process.
Figure 5
The changing unemploymen rate (2003/1993, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
28
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Figure 6
The changing ratio of unemployed citizens with university or college degree
(2001/1990, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
The changing unemployment rates are indicating the relative positions of ur-
ban areas between 1993 and 2003. As it can be seen only one background
settlement in the urban area of Miskolc and Pécs show negative unemployment
tendencies (Figure 5).
Unemployment indicators have been improved the most spectacularly in the
core cities of urban areas particularly in Budapest, Kecskemét, Debrecen and
Nyíregyháza (with decreasing to one-forth, one-fifth of their initial values) as the
earlier very high unemployment dropped thanks to several businesses immigrat-
ing since the late 1990s with an increasing speed. In background settlements un-
employment situation is showing a rather heterogenous picture as it has improved
only in places with good transport connections. In the urban areas of Gy r,
Székesfehérvár, Pécs and Szeged having very good unemployment indicators
since the beginning of economic restructuring the improvement progress was less
spectacular but in their background settlements the drop rate of unemployment
depended on the degree of their physical accessibility. However Miskolc and its
background settlements are still facing heavy unemployment.
29
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Figure 6 is showing the changing relative positions of high-educated people
among the unemployed in urban areas between 1990 and 2001. The spatial pat-
terns of these changes are directly correlating with the progress of suburbaniza-
tion process.
This is also true for the majority of settlements in the Budapest agglomeration
zone. However in the urban agglomeration areas of Kecskemét, Székesfehérvár
and Pécs this situation has greatly improved due to the increasing ratio of new
jobs requiring high professional skills and qualifications.
Figure 7 is showing three totally differing tendencies in the changing ratio of
active wage earners. There are positive changes in the urban zones of Gy r, Szé-
kesfehérvár and Budapest (with higher than 33% increase ratio). In the peripheral
zones of the first two cities a moderate growth can be observed but in Budapest
and its agglomeration zone the growth rate of active wage earners is very high
with a similarly high drop rate of active wage earners in the core cities. Also
negative tendencies can be observed in the urban environment of Nyíregyháza,
Debrecen and Miskolc while the situation in their core cities has changed posi-
tively (with 20% growth rate during eleven years). The urban areas of Kecskemét,
Szeged and Pécs have almost the same growth rate as their peripheries and from
spatial aspects the intensity of these changes can be described as homogenous.
Figure 7 The changing ratio of active wage earners (2003/1993, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
30
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Figure 8 is presenting the changing ratio of brain workers of the total em-
ployment data between the last two censuses. As it can be seen the situation has
much more improved in background settlements than in core cities. This is ex-
plained by the over-representation of brain workers among the outmigrants of city
centres during the suburbanization process. The data are also indicating this social
group’s changing attitudes to the job system and job issues of its residential envi-
ronment (e.g mobility, transport and other socio-economic impacts). This group’s
better adaptation to changing circumstances can be explained by the brain work-
ers’ traditionally higher qualifications and earnings. In city centres the drop rates
are dramatic, only Székesfehérvár seems to be the only exception from this trend
where brain workers had an opportunity for changing their place of residence
within the city centre with improving employment circumstances (e.g. a new col-
lege was built). The improvement of the employment indicators in background
settlements is very spectacular indicating their definite preference during the resi-
dential site selection of high-educatted people. Although their selection criteria
are varying by urban areas but the settlements they select have similar geographi-
cal and socio-economic features.
Figure 8
The changing ratio of brain workers (2001/1990, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
31
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
People permanently living on regular social benefit are a specific group within
inactive social classes. Their number drastically increased between 1993 and 2003
(Figure 9) even despite that the ratio of inactive groups has decreased during the
past few years (although the reactivization rate of other inactive groups was
higher). However there are plenty of tasks left in the field of reactivating this
group in Hungary and its urban areas (in comparison with Western democracies
Hungary is lagging behind them by 10% in employment rate). A further im-
provement in this field would be one of the most desirable ways of easing socio-
economic differences.
Figure 9 The changing number of people living on regular social benefit
(2003/1993, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
The number of people (partially) living on regular social benefit is showing an
increasing trend chiefly in city centres (except in Gy r, Székesfehérvár and
Nyíregyháza). In the cities of Miskolc, Debrecen, Pécs and Szeged the number of
people living on benefits has significantly increased due to the restructuring or
other problems of local economy. The slightest growth in the number of socially
handicapped people can be observed in the agglomerational settlements of Gy r,
Kecskemét and Budapest. The highest increase has been registered in the back-
32
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
ground settlements of Miskolc, Szeged and Debrecen, which can be explained by
the higher than average representation of active wage earners among outmigrants
from city centres to urban peripheries and partially by the improvement of em-
ployment chances.
Employment chances are chiefly determined by the number of active busi-
nesses and their demands for labour, therefore they are primary factors of socio-
economic inequalities. Between 1996 and 2003 the number of active businesses
increased dynamically in the background settlements of West-Hungarian urban
areas and in the Budapest agglomeration zone (Figure 10). In the core cities of all
urban areas a moderate growth can be observed by taking a glance at the number
of active businesses. Due to their different dynamism all these are reducing socio-
spatial differences between city centres and their urban peripheries but at the
same time they are increasing differences in employment on macroregional level.
The increase in the number of active businesses in bakground settlements was
rather differentiated, showing strong correlation with the outmigration desti-
nations of brain workers and high-educated professionals which seemed largely
determined by the physical accessibility and the socio-economic characteristics of
settlements.
Figure 10 The changing number of active businesses (2003/1996, %)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
33
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Health services
Our research data show significant differences in the institutional supply of
health, education and cultural services between urban areas. These differences are
strongly increasing socio-spatial differences. Concentration is the most dominant
feature of the changes in the institutional supply of these services i.e. the increas-
ing role of big cities in public services which is just contradicting to the new
trends of residential functions weakening in city centres and getting stronger in
background settlements.
The number of general practitioners in settlements is a quantitative indicator of
primary health services. It shows how crowded the general practitioners’ waiting
rooms are and how wide is the selection palette of local practitioners.
On the scale of urban areas there are no great differences in the quantitative
indicators of primary health services. The urban areas of Nyíregyháza and Buda-
pest have the worst indicators in this field, due to their relative shortages of gen-
eral practitioners. Here the average patient/doctor ratio was 2400 in year 2003
(the average patient/doctor ratio in urban areas is 2080) while in the urban area of
Pécs it is 1500 only (the national level of patient/doctor ratio is 1980). Pécs is in a
unique position, as the health service indicators of its background settlements are
better than of the core city due to their lower number of inhabitants. (Although,
regarding this field, a strong equalization process has been going on since 1993
and some minor settlements in the urban areas of Pécs, Gy r and Székesfehérvár
have been left without any general practitioner services. Their number sorted in
descending order is 13, 8 and 3. The inhabitants of these settlements have no
other choice than visiting the neighbour city’s or village’s general practitioner as
they neither have doctor on duty services) (Figure 11).
Figure 11 is showing the changing ‘utilization ratio’ of general practitioners
between 1993 and 2003. The tendency of changes is varying by urban areas be-
tween 1993 and 2003: on national level the quantitative health service indicators
have improved. A higher than national average improvement was registered in the
urban area of Miskolc only. The quantitative indicators of health service also im-
proved in the background settlements of Kecskemét and Miskolc but in all the
other urban areas they have deteriorated (mostly in Budapest and Pécs and in their
urban agglomeration). Thus, national level improvement is mainly the conse-
quence of increasing quantitative health service indicators in small towns and
villages excluded from urban areas and a dual tendency may be observed in urban
areas: worsening indicators in background settlements falling behind and im-
proving indicators in core cities exceeding the national average.
Deteriorating indicators are explained by the changing situation of background
settlements. In urban areas core cities are in a better position than their peripheries
but this dichotomy can be eliminated by the assumption that a great part of citi-
zens living in urban peripheries – on the basis of free choice of general practitio-
34
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
ners – uses their services in the nearby cities. This hypothesis can be verified by
the fact that quantitative health service indicators worsened mostly in background
settlements (especially in the agglomeration zone of Budapest, Szeged, Székesfe-
hérvár and Pécs), which can be interpreted as a kind of rationalization, coopera-
tion creating a balanced spatial division of health services in urban areas as in
all core cities without exception the situation has sgnificantly improved.
Figure 11
The changing average patient/doctor ratio between 1993 and 2003 (%)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
There are wide differences among patient/doctor ratios among background
settlements (the two extremes are Orf and Gy rújbarát with 770 and 5053 pa-
tient/doctor ratio. This is greater than a sevenfold difference) and even within
urban areas (the largest 6.5 fold difference has been registered in Gy r agglom-
eration zone between Kisbajcs and Gy rújbarát and the smallest 1.8 fold differ-
ence between Nyírtura and Nyírpazony in the Nyíregyháza agglomeration zone).
The results have verified our assumption that although differences in the institu-
tional supply of public services (especially the health segment) – are not primary
but they – do facilitate the increase of social differences in urban areas and they
do have some role in sustaining them as well.
35
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
In-patient services are an important part of health services where the availabil-
ity (and utilization ratio) of hospital beds is an important statistical indicator. The
value of hospital bed supply per 1,000 inhabitants informs us about the possibili-
ties and limits of health services and the differences of this value are one of the
major indicators of social differences. All these data are relevant to cities only but
some city hospitals – the majority of hospitals involved in our research are oper-
ating in big cities are performing county level services as well (their service ter-
ritory is inhabited by 150–200 thousand people). Of Hungarian urban areas
Szeged, Budapest and Nyíregyháza had the highest value of hospital bed supply
per 1,000 inhabitants indicators (between 6 and 3.6), while the lowest values have
been registered in the urban areas of Pécs and Székesfehérvár (between 0.7 and
1.1, the national average is 2.6). Thus, the difference between hospital bed sup-
plies is almost ninefold among the different urban areas.
Between 1993 and 2003 the number of hospital beds increased in Debrecen
only (113%) while higher than the national average reduction of hospital beds was
carried out in the urban areas of Gy r and Kecskemét (76–83%). There were almost
no hospital bed reductions in the urban areas of Székesfehérvár and Budapest.
Outside the territory of urban areas only the background settlements of Szeged
and Budapest (Deszk, Pomáz, Kistarcsa, Vác, Visegrád, Dunaharaszti and Török-
bálint) have available hospital beds. The cutdown ratio of hospital beds was be-
low the average in the urban area of Szeged and exceeded the national average in
the urban area of Budapest. Cities with the highest hospital bed supply per 1,000
inhabitant indicator (18–20) are located in East-Hungary: (Miskolc, Nyíregyháza
and Debrecen), while Szeged, Gy r and Budapest have the lowest indicators (12–
13). The national level hospital bed supply per 1,000 inhabitants indicator is 2.5,
while this average figure is 1.5 for big cities. The reduction ratio of hospital beds
was the lowest in Debrecen, Székesfehérvár and Nyíregyháza and the highest was
in the cities of Kecskemét and Gy r (Figure 12).
Education
The differences between the institutional supply and the use of education services
were investigated in the public and higher education system. These services are
also dominated by high urban concentration and their importance is continuously
increasing.
The average value of full-time secondary pupils per 1,000 inhabitants informs
us about the present utilization ratio of secondary schools and its future tenden-
cies. On the scale of urban areas the average 8.5 secondary pupil per 1,000 in-
habitants value is nearly one-fifth of the national average (43; but this figure has
resulted from the non-existence of students in non-existent background settle-
ments). The two extreme values of these data are 3 secondary pupils per 1,000
36
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
inhabitants in Gy r and 18 in Nyíregyháza (this figure is 13 in the Budapest ag-
glomeration zone. The 40% average change in urban areas is more or less corre-
lating with the 35% of average growth between years 1993 and 2003.
Figure 12
The changing values of total hospital bed supply per 1,000 inhabitants between
1993 and 2003 (%)
Source: edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
The values on the scale of urban areas can practically be replaced by the aver-
age of cities everywhere except in Budapest. Within urban areas the average of
cities (85 secondary pupils per 1,000 inhabitants) is the double of the national
average clearly expressing the high urban concentration of secondary education
services. Differences on the scale of cities can be well illustrated by the fact that
compared to the value of 63 secondary pupils per 1,000 inhabitants value in Bu-
dapest this figure increases to 110 in Székesfehérvár. Besides Székesfehérvár,
Miskolc, Gy r and Nyíregyháza are traditional ‘high-scool cities’, while Buda-
pest, Szeged, Pécs and Kecskemét are the least high-school oriented. The 35%
national growth rate is relevant for big cities as well: the growth rate was the
smallest in Gy r and Szeged (125%) and was the highest in Nyíregyháza and Pécs
(145%, Figure 13).
37
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Figure 13
The changing figures of full-time secondary pupils between 1993 and 2003 (%)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
The ratio of the students of higher education of the broader sense (accredited
master trainings, university and college education, post-graduate professional
training, PhD, DLA training) in different sections (full-time courses, evening
classes, correspondence courses) is providing a more clear picture on the situation
of the whole higher education sector than data limited to the ratio of full-time
students only. Of all the background settlements only those in the Budapest ag-
glomeration zone have institutes of higher education, therefore making difference
between background settlements would be useless in this case.
On the scale of urban areas the student per 1,000 inhabitants indicators are
exceeding the national average in several urban areas (Nyíregyháza, Debrecen,
Szeged) (10 students per 1,000 inhabitants) indicating that in these urban areas
(cities) the full-time forms of higher education, extended by evening and corre-
spondence courses or other supplementary forms of university or college
education such as accredited master trainings, special training classes etc. are
more available than in any other parts of Hungary. These forms of education are
the least available in the cities of Gy r, Székesfehérvár and Budapest. The urban
area of Miskolc was the only one with decreasing number of students between
1993 and 2003 but the growth rate of students was also below the national
38
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
average of 16 students per 1,000 inhabitants (108%). However the growth rate of
other urban areas fairly exceeded it (144% in the urban area of Gy r, 137% in the
urban area of Pécs) (Figure 14).
On the scale of big cities the values of these figures are lower, due to filtering
out the data of background settlements. In this way the relative higher educational
capacities and the utilization ratio of big cities can directly be compared. Both in
case of full-time higher education services and in case of comprehensive higher
education services Szeged and Pécs can be regarded as ‘classic university cities’
with the values of 102, 89 and 172, 170 students per 1,000 inhabitants (these fig-
ures are four times higher than the values of the national average [20 and 40]).
These cities are followed by Debrecen and Gy r with their dynamically increas-
ing values. However, the educational indicators of all the big cities are exceeding
the national average, even the values of Székesfehérvár and Kecskemét by 1.5
times having colleges only. The differences in higher education supply among big
cities are threefold regarding both major forms of their training system.
Figure 14
The changing number of university and college students between
1993 and 2003 (%)
Source: Edited by Szépvölgyi Á. on the basis of KSH data.
39
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
The social structure of metropolitan areas: the changing
core-periphery model6
The social structure of Hungarian metropolitan spaces has historically been for-
mulated by the high-ranked core and low ranked periphery model. (In the period
following the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries until the 1950s high social classes
with high incomes lived in the inner city quarters of Budapest while suburban
zones, industrial districts and peripheral settlements were inhabited by low social
classes).7
The state socialist regime significantly changed the social inequalities of the
historical core-periphery model. These changes were initiated by the functional
and social transformation of city centres and by the suburbanization process of
that time.
Since the 1970s Hungary has been struggling with the problems of inner cities:
the physically eroding houses and flats, the increasing number of slums and the
damages of the environment. Deterioriating cities became more perceivable in the
1980s. The concentration of the poor, the old-aged and the Roma population in
large cities was significant even in the periods mentioned above (Ladányi-Szelé-
nyi, 1988, 83; Musil, 2002). but the massive outmigration of middle classes from
urban peripheries did not start at that time, though the distribution mechanisms of
state housing provision, the building of new housing estates created some oppor-
tunity for some ‘quasi-suburbanisation’. In several cases the society of housing
estates was originating from the outmigration of the wealthy, socially high-posi-
tioned classes from city centres with better political chances for the enforcement
of their interests. Within the framework of a redistributive state housing provision
system8 the modern, new housing estates built in the outer belt of city centres or
6I used core-periphery model in socio-geographic and sociological sense. In socio-geographic sense
the core should be interpreted as the spatial centre of a certain geographic unit while periphery
means the outer space of the geographic unit. Between core and outer space there may exist
economic, infrastructural, functional and social differences or disparities. These disparities are
marking out the spatial centre of the geographic unit and the periphery's ecological and social
positions. In sociological sense core and periphery are marking out the social rank of the
geographical unit's population in the social hierarchy and the social position of population living in
core and peripheral areas. In my ‘traditional’ core-periphery model the inhabitants living in core
areas have the highest social rank gradually lowering as moving out of the city centre.
7In Hungarian big cities the core-periphery model has never followed directly this pure analogy.
City centres had always residents from the lower classes as well. This goes back to architectural
reasons on the one hand and to the traditional structure of urban societies resulting from the low
percentage of upper and middle classes.
8The redistributive housing provision system was an organic component of the housing policy of the
socialist regime until the late 1980s. It was characterized by the state’s dominance in the provision
of flats. The system was originally targeted at reducing social differences in the state’s welfare
services. However in most cases the provision of flats – by eliminating the rules of market and
social aspects – was driven by different political motivations and by certain elite groups in power.
40
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
in urban outskirts equipped with all comfort and amenities were considered as an
acknowledgement of social and political position and a bonus for the loyalty to
the state. The less preferential middle-class and lower middle classes, positioned
at a lower level of the social and political ranking system, had no chances for
leaving their homes located in urban centres within the framework of the state
housing provision system (Cséfalvay 1995, 41).
The above-described processes changed the linear downward tendency of
physical environment and social position indicators as moving out from the city
centre towards the peripheral zone. The ecological position of city centres has
deteriorated, the social reputation of transitional urban zones has increased as a
result of building new housing estates and the social classes settled down there.
At the same time the social reputation of urban peripheries remained low.
The 1990s was a period of fundamental changes. These changes took place in
a very contradictory way with a rapid and spectacular development at certain
spots of urban centres while other parts were lagging and gradually perishing. The
advantages of urban restructuring are originating from ‘big city life’-styled devel-
opment processes, from the domination of business and commercial functions.
This assigns characteristic features for metropolitan centres: the building of finan-
cial centres, banks, office quarters the building of new or the rehabilitation of
urban economic and commercial centres, the construction of their servicing infra-
structure, building or renewing hotels, shopping centres and business or market
oriented real estate developments. The elegant shops, the new restaurants, bars
and cafeterias, pedestrian streets, tourist spots create a modern urban environment
in city centres. The above-described changes have partially improved and par-
tially spoiled the city centres’ ecological positions in the traditional core-periph-
ery model.
Since the 1980s an increasing number of people have outmigrated from city
centres into urban peripheries. The years of the 1990s further increased the dy-
namics of suburbanization.9 Subutrbanization processes were further encouraged
by the economic demands of spatially expanding residents and by the spatial de-
centralization of economy. The new housing market positions, the increasing sala-
ries of (mostly high class) citizens, the widening selection alternatives and de-
mands for suburban residential areas are further catalysators of suburbanization.
These new demands were correlating with urban environmental problems too,
such as air pollution, noise and the missing rehabilitation of central urban quar-
9The above described socio-statistical analyses have also verified the dynamically growing intensity
of suburbanization. The population of big cities and their urban areas has dropped by 5% between
1993 and 2003. This drop rate exceeded the national average. One of the largest population drop
rates (nearly 7%) was revealed in the Budapest agglomeration zone. The greater part of population
drop took place in cities. It was 14.6% in Budapest and the average drop rate of the remaining
cities was 4.8%. The average population growth rate of suburbs was 15.7%.
41
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
ters. The local development policy of suburban municipalities is further increas-
ing the dynamism of suburbanisation by encouraging outmigrants for settling
down by different means of land use policy, such as infrastructure development
and big supply of building sites.
The findings of the representative survey in 9 urban areas in 2004 have re-
vealed that suburbanization process may be interpreted as a spatial restructuring
of high classes in the city pursuant to their gradual outmigration from the city
centre into external urban zones and finally to suburban zone. The outmigrants
first selected well-advanced urban peripheries, then good quality urban outskirts
and finally less-advanced urban peripheries.10 On the other hand we also followed
the spatial migration of low classes within urban zones. For example in Székesfe-
hérvár only a low ratio of high and upper-middle classes are involved in subur-
banization but middle and low classes were more mobile. (A representative sur-
vey for the suburban population of Székesfehérvár indicates that 8.4% of the out-
migrants from city centre are top or medium-level managers, 7% are private en-
trepreneurs, 13% are high-educated employees and 48% are skilled or semi-
skilled workers (Szirmai et al. 2003a).
Several urban researches have revealed that the majority of citizens including
high classes have no intentions to move out from the city centre. In a representa-
tive sociological survey carried out in 2003 only 5% of people interviewed had
definite plans for outmigrating and another 3% are also intended to leave the city
centre but had no chances for doing it. Another 4% are going to leave the city
centre within the next few years11 (Szirmai et al 2003b). A public poll made in
Tatabánya in 2000 also confirmed this tendency as 78% of the interviewed resi-
dents claimed they would remain in the city and only 7% claimed expressed their
wish to outmigrate the city (Kiss–Dénes, 2000, 36).
10The zoning of the 9 urban areas of our investigation was partially made on the basis of the
traditional (human and ecological) classification categories of urban sociology and partially by
local experiences and on-site inspection walks. The following major urban zones were delimited:
central urban zone or the historic city centre in other words. It is the old town and the first
employment zone with the city’s employment organisations of outstanding importance
(administrative bodies, banks and credit institutes, educational and cultural organisations, offices
etc.), business, commercial and entertainment facilities. This area is characterized by multi-storey
office blocks and high built-in density. The transitional zone comprises industrial plants and
commercial centres with their surrounding residential quarters. The suburban zone consists of
satellite cities standing in close functional relationship with the city. These satellite cities used to
function in administrative sense as independent settlements in the past. Today this zone has
residential functions primarily. It is generally built in with private houses, housing estates or
nowadays more and more gated residential communities are emerging here
11In an NKFP survey made in 2005 already 6.4% of the inhabitants of Székesfehérvár stated they
had a definite plan to leave the city and another 9.7% claimed they would like to leave the city
centre but had no chances for doing it.
42
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
The results of the representative survey of urban areas in 2005 have also re-
vealed that the majority of urban area residents – 79.6% – are not intending (or
having no chances) to change their place of residence. Only 13% of city dwellers
stated they definitely would move out of the city and another 7.3% claimed they
intended to leave the city but had no chances for doing it. Of the suburban citizens
4.2% would move but had no chances for doing it. Of those being sure of moving
the percentage of city centre and transitional zone inhabitants is high. In inner city
quarters people with secondary and high education and brain workers while in
transitional zones and city outskirts people with secondary education and private
entrepreneurs are over-represented among those claiming to be definite of
changing their residential location. In advanced and less advanced suburban zones
again the ratio of people with secondary and high-education, private entrepreneurs
and brain workers is the highest within the same question item. Thus, it is an in-
teresting phenomenon that on the two endpoints of urban hierarchy – in the core
city and in the periphery – the percentage of the highest social classes while in
transitional urban zones the percentage of middle classes is the highest in the
group wishing to change residential place.
More than half of the citizens intending to move would like to find their new
residence within the same city and 22% would remain in the neighbourhood of
their present home. (This figure is 13% in urban peripheries). Of the urban resi-
dents we have interviewed 27% would like to find their new home outside the
city. Our data are indicating a higher than average ratio of low social classes se-
lecting socially low-ranked urban districts, such as urban-style residential areas in
the proximity of the city centre or garden city areas or rural style suburban zones
to live in. Middle classes prefer to settle down in elite residential areas, garden
cities or gated residential communities. The highest social classes and profession-
als intending to leave the city centre follow two patterns during the selection of
their new homesite: they either move out to elite central urban districts of their
cities, the historic old town part or escape out of the city to suburban garden villa
quarters or elite gated residential communities. Brainworkers and professionals
prefer rural style urban peripheries for their living environment. Finding correla-
tion between a position of a selected (or desired) residential area in the ecologi-
cal hierarchy and the social position of the interviewed persons is a very impor-
tant result of our research: different social classes select ecological-social units
harmonising the best with their social position and financial circumstances.
Residence change plans in Hungarian urban areas do not provide a sufficient
basis for forecasting a significantly accelerating suburbanisation process. Today’s
residence change plans do not represent a massive trend; they are rather repre-
senting the disstisfaction of minority groups with their present place of residence
or expressing their new expectations for their residential area. This does not prog-
nostify a radical change in the present social structure of urban zones and in the
43
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
core-periphery model having been formed by history and bearing the marks of the
regime change. However recent migration processes show a significant restruc-
turing process. The spatial restructuring of high social classes within urban areas,
their gradual out-migration from the city centre and settling down in suburban
zones changes the content of the traditional core-periphery model, rearranges the
social structure of peripheries and although in different ways but improves their
ecological and social positions.
The social structure of metropolitan areas
The analyses in the first part of our case studies have revealed the inequalities of
infrastructural and institutional supply between cities and their neighbourhood
(background settlements), the advantageous positions of cities and the disadvan-
tageous positions of neighbourhood settlements. The inequalities of infrastructural
and institutional supply between cities and their neighbourhood and the geo-
graphical units of urban areas are marking such ecological positions (Figure 15–
16).
Figure 15
The spatial location of university and college graduates in the urban areas
of Hungary
44
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Figure 16 Taxable value per capita in the urban areas of Hungary
Following the mapping of the infrastructural and institutional supply of urban
areas we prepared a comparative analysis on the social structure of cities and their
environment. 'From the series of comparative analyses of social statistical data it
became evident that cities and their environment have rigid hierarchical social
structure: high social classes tend to live in city centres and low social classes are
rather located in the outskirts of cities (Baráth–Molnár–Szépvölgyi, 2005)
The survey provided a clear analysis of socio-spatial hierarchy. While moving
out the city centre towards outer urban districts and outskirts the ratio of high
social classes (highly qualified professionals, qualified experts) is gradually de-
creasing with an increasing spatial concentration of low classes (low educated,
unskilled people)12 (see Figures 17–18).
12The research sample of the residential survey included maximum three settlements from the most
advanced and maximum three settlements from the backwarded background settlements of each
big city. The background settlements were selected by a non-parametric trial named as ranking
number method. The ranking was made by the consideration of the indices as follows:
accessibility, housing conditions, public and higher education, health service, the activity intensity
of local entrepreneurs, taxation, incomes, employment, unemployment, mobility and social
provision. The final development ranking was prepared on the basis of the summarized ranking of
indices. In each urban area maximum three settlements from the most advanced and maximum
45
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
The research is confirming the segregated socio-spatial structure of urban
areas in Hungary.13 The data of research are showing that the ratio of city centre
residents with primary education (18%) and vocational school certificate (14.2%)
are lower than their sample ratio (28.8% and 18.9%). Their spatial concentration
in transitional areas is correlating with their sample average (27.4% and 19.3%)
but higher than the average in urban outskirts (38.2% and 21.1%) and suburban
zones. The percentage of people with secondary education in city centres is higher
than their sample average (34.2%) and this is correlating with the national average
in transitional urban areas and with the lower than average values in urban
outskirts and peripheral zones. The spatial concentration of university and college
graduates is higher than their sample average in city centres, correlating with the
average in transitional zones and it is much lower in suburban zones (differing by
the development level of suburban zone).
Figure 17
The spatial division of population by education leveli n different urban zones
underdeveloped urban
46,8
28,5
19,7
5
periphery
advanced urban
33,5
25,8
28
12,7
periphery
38,2
21,1
31,5
9,2
suburban zone
27,4
19,3
34,1
19,2
transitional zone
18
14,2
39
28,8
central urban zone
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
maximum primary school
vocational school
grammar school, engineering school certificate university or col ege degree
Source: Edited by Zoltán Ferencz ont he basis of NKFP data.
three from the most backwarded ones were selected into the sample. These criteria are serving as a
basis for the definition of advanced and backwarded suburban settlements.
13The term segregation means a spatial isolation with a higher than average concentration of a social
group within the social structure of a certain urban district.
46
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
Figure 18
The spatial division of population by profession in different urban zones
underdeveloped urban
7,5 4,8 12,6
75,1
periphery
8,4 4,7
23,3
63,6
advanced urban periphery
5,8 4,2
20,7
69,3
suburban zone
7,9 7,9
32,3
51,9
transitional zone
9,4
8,6
42,5
39,5
central urban zone
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90% 100%
private entrepreneur
high positioned employee
brain worker
manual worker
Source: Edited by Zoltán Ferencz ont he basis of NKFP data
The spatial division of professions by urban zone is showing a similar pattern
with that of the education level. Its most spectacular element is the considerably
lower concentration of manual workers in city centres than the average (55.1%)
and their very high concentration in urban outskirts and suburban zones. The dif-
ferences of the spatial division of private entrepreneurs are less high between
urban zones (except for suburban zones), their distribution ratio is correlating
with the sample average (7.6%) with low dispersion coefficients. The higher than
the average (30.5%) concentration ratio of brain workers in city centres is also a
factor of primary importance from this aspect.
The spatial location of residential incomes is another indicator of segregated
socio-spatial structure. The ratio of people falling into the highest income cate-
gory (above 100 thousand HUF per month) is gradually decreasing as moving out
of the city centre towards the peripheral zones (23.7–8.8%). It is exceeding the
national average (15.6%) in city centres and in transitional zones. We can see the
same tendency in case of the income category between 75 and 100 thousand HUF
and of the category below 50 thousand HUF per month. However much less dif-
47
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
ferences can be seen between the two extreme values in the category of average
incomes (50–75 thousand HUF) and in zero income categories which means they
are not fitting into the hierarchical structure model.
Thus, as the above listed indicators are illustrating, the geographical units of
urban areas i.e. the core settlement (the city) and the periphery (the suburb) are
also differentiated in the context of infrastructural and institutional supply in-
cluding (and verified by the statistically analysed) socio-spatial and ecological
inequalities and of the different spatial concetration of different social classes.
The dual structured core-periphery model
And now we are analysing the changing core-periphery model by a figure (Figure
x), where the starting and at the same time the peak point is representing the core
area, i.e. the historic city centre and the endpoint is representing the periphery i.e.
the underdeveloped suburb. By the same figure we are demonstrating the spatial
division of the urban area’s population by education level, profession and income
categories. As it can clearly be noticed the social structure of advanced urban
peripheries is breaking the monotonous downsliding trend of the traditional spa-
tial, ecological and social hierarchies by turning it back into an upward direction
for a while. This can be explained by the fact that new social values have been
assigned to the peripheral zones of urban areas. Due to the outcomes of the pre-
sent socio-economic processes of suburbanization and to the new socio-economic
and functional relations of urban peripheries the social appreciation of urban pe-
ripheries has been differentiated; the suburban parts of urban zones have been
divided into low-ranked and high ranked socio-spatial units. These units – periur-
ban distrits and villages – are populated both by high and low social classes.
The recent changes of inner city quarters (slums, regenerated areas) have also
changed the earlier ecological and social structure of cities. The once homoge-
nous high social reputation of inner cities has been eroded by the deteriorating
parts of inner city quarters.
The socio-spatial analyses of urban areas suggest that the traditional core-pe-
riphery model is relevant for the urban areas in Hungary as well. In cities and
their central areas the presence of high classes is dominant while in suburban
zones and urban peripheries generally low classes are in majority. Going outward
from core areas towards the periphery the social structure shows a hierarchical
structure. Going down the ecological-spatial slope indicating the economic, infra-
structural and institutional supply level of the different geographical units of ur-
ban spaces we can see a gradually decreasing presence of high social classes and
a gradually increasing presence of low social classes.
On the basis of the evaluation of research data we can also declare that in
Hungarian urban spaces the traditional core-periphery model cannot be identified
48
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
in its original form any more: the social structure of advanced urban peripheries is
firmly breaking up the monotony of the downward line of the ecological-spatial
slope of social hierarchy between the 'two endpoints': the core and the periphery.
As a consequence of transition and globalisation the social structure of Hun-
garian metropolitan spaces and the social content of the core-periphery model
have significantly changed. The social processes of the past years through the
differentiated – partially high, partially low social contents of the core-periphery
model created a dual socio-spatial hierarchy. The first type of socio-spatial hier-
archy contains a high-ranked core and a low ranked periphery model. The second
type of socio-spatial hierarchy shows a formation of low-ranked core and a high-
ranked periphery model. Both hierarchies are simultaneously present in urban
spaces.
Conclusion
On the basis of analysing the spatial disparities of Hungarian urban areas we can
draw the following conclusions:
The analysis of the infrastructural, demographic, housing, economic and
institutional supply indicators in Hungary’s nine urban areas has revealed two
major tendencies: On the one hand during the research period the separation of
residential and public service functions further increased and also has restructured
the relevant spatial disparities. This means that the improving residential
functions in background settlements were not followed by an appropriate
development of those public services that we have investigated in our research.
Institutions and services providing extra facilities beyond the essential public
services are concentrated in big cities only, which increases the dependency of
background settlements on core cities. On the other hand, however, successful
economic restructuring does no necessarily imply a dynamic development of
institutional supply because the expansion or retreat of the services we have
investigated are influenced by other factors as well, such as residential incomes,
the key factors of public consumption or the historical background of institutional
supply. In certain areas the provision of public services was abandoned by the
state and there were no businesses to fill in the gap of missing public services by
the same or similar ones.
1) The spatial disparities of economic development are increasing the
superiority of the metropolitan area of Budapest in the areas of economic
power and efficiency (foreign direct investments, the level of incomes,
economic performance, employment structure, purchasing power etc.). The
current development disparities of provincial urban areas are showing ten-
dencies having been emerged several decades ago: the urban areas of Gy r
and Székesfehérvár in Northern Transdanubia besides functioning as re-
49
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
gional centres enjoy significant competitive advantages as well and are
pretty far ahead of their competitors;: the urban areas of Nyíregyháza, Mi-
skolc and Kecskemét. Within urban areas economic resources are heavily
concentrated in core cities. A comparison of the division of economic per-
formance between central cities and non-central settlements points out that
the economic performance of non-central settlements is only 10–15% of the
urban area’s overall economic performance. This figure is only cca 20%
even in the metropolitan area of Budapest.
2) The changes of demographic and economic indicators within the period be-
tween 1993 and 2003 (and 1990–2001) are clearly marking a strong corre-
lation between increasing social inequalities and agglomeration tendencies.
As it is seen the spatial disparities between urban areas originating from
macroregional development differences have decreased but due to the in-
tensification of suburbanization and to its consequences core-periphery re-
lations and spatial dependencies have increased within urban areas.
3) The development chances of background settlements were determined by
their geographical location. Settlements with good physical accessibility
and having built strong connections with other settlements can easily inte-
grate themselves into their urban area. This can easily be verified by statis-
tical figures. Others with less favourable circumstances seem to be uncer-
tain of their integration into their urban area and they are bouncing between
closing up and ‘fading out’ i.e. falling off to the level of disadvantaged ru-
ral areas.
4) Spatial disparities are also largely influenced by the processes and impacts
of the integration to global economy (the benefits that can be gained from
the socio-economic impacts of global networks and foreign direct invest-
ments). At the same time these processes and impacts are also warning of
the threats of socio-economic inequalities, of the increasing interaction, of
their mutual consequences and of their spatial expansion. All these may
intensify social conflicts that can already be noticed in Budapest and its en-
vironment due to the increasing problems of transport and loads on envi-
ronment and to their negative social impacts seen day by day.
5) The results of the representative research of Hungary’s metropolitan areas
are providing clear evidences on the socio-structural inequalities of urban
areas. The centres of Hungarian urban areas are concentrating high social
classes, high-educated and qualified professionals earning high salaries,
while low social classes generally live in the peripheral parts and in suburbs
of low social prestige. However some groups of handicapped classes do
live in the city centre as well and the percentage of high social classes is
also significant in suburbs. Today’s socio-spatial processes, their historic
determinations, the age of transition and global integration have all created
50
Molnár, Balázs - Szépvölgyi, Ákos - Szirmai, Viktória :
The Social Structure of Hungarian Urban Areas: Key Factors and Characteristic Features.
In: Social Inequalities in Urban Areas and Globalization. The Case of Central Europe.
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2007. 18-51. p. Discussion Papers, Special
a core-periphery model of dual social structure where the traditional model
of socially high-ranked centrre with and low-ranked periphery has been
extended by another scheme of low-ranked centre and high-ranked periph-
ery. All these processes have created a new type of socio-spatial unit.
The Austrian case study – Social Inequalities
in the Vienna Metropolitan Region
Preface
A spatial analysis of social inequalities tackles one of the major issues of modern
human geography: How equal or unequal is society and its spatial distribution?
The answers range from one extreme, a totally equal distribution representing a
homogeneous social area, to the other, a distinctly unequal distribution as a char-
acteristic feature of a society that is socially as well as spatially highly diverse.
Equal distribution indicates that all spatial units share the same features, which
means that all units have the same proportion of affluent and poor residents, the
same proportion of qualified and unqualified employed persons and of large and
small apartments. Unequal distribution obviously refers to the complete opposite.
The highly qualified and well-off groups of population as well as the large apart-
ments concentrate in a very limited number of units, whereas low-income and
unskilled residents living in small apartments concentrate in a completely differ-
ent set of spatial units. What is not intended in this context, however, is an
evaluation of socio-spatial inequality, since the question whether an unequal spa-
tial distribution is to be interpreted as fair or unfair will always be a matter of
ideology. Therefore the focus of this paper will rather be put on an objective de-
scription.
The analysis itself is primarily based on data of the census 2001, which allows
a very detailed spatial differentiation. The first step includes the identification of
relevant indicators characterizing social inequality, the second step is aimed at
depicting their spatial distribution and, thirdly, the individual features are going to
be combined in order to establish basic dimensions of inequality. The smallest
spatial unit in this analysis is the community or municipality for the suburban
region of Vienna or the census tract for the City of Vienna itself. Together the
City of Vienna and its suburban region constitute the Vienna Metropolitan Region
that has been subject of the analysis.14
14In this context Ms D. Schönbichler is to be thanked for the translation into English as well as for
reviewing the draft.
51