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The GDP in this area (Osaka and Kobe) is $341 billion, making it one of the world's most productive regions, a match even for Paris and London.[3] And MasterCard Worldwide reported Osaka is 19th ranking city of the world's leading global cities and the instrumental role in driving the global economy.[4] The name Keihanshin is constructed by extracting a representative kanji from Kyoto (京都), Osaka (大阪), and Kobe (神戸), but using the On-yomi (Chinese reading) instead of the corresponding Kun-yomi (Japanese reading) for each of the characters taken from Osaka and Kobe.
[edit] Definitions[edit] Range of distanceThe Japan Statistics Bureau defines the set of municipalities that are entirely or mostly within 50 kilometers of the Municipal Office of Osaka as one measure of the metropolitan area. As of 2000, the population for this region was 16,566,704.[5] [edit] Urban Employment AreaThe Urban Employment Area is a metropolitan area definition developed at the Faculty of Economics of the University of Tokyo.[6] This definition is analogous to the Metropolitan Statistical Area concept used to delineate metropolitan areas in the United States. The basic building blocks are municipalities. The core area is the set of municipalities that contain a densely inhabited district (DID) with a population of 10,000 or more. The Urban Employment Area is called Metropolitan Employment Area, when its core area has 50,000 DID population or more. Otherwise, the area is called Micropolitan Employment Area. A DID is a group of census enumeration districts inhabited at densities of 4,000 or more persons per km². Outlying areas are those municipalities where 10% or more of the employed population work in the core area or in another outlying area. Overlaps are not allowed and an outlying area is assigned to the core area where it has the highest commuter ratio. This definition assigns a Metropolitan Employment Area to the following cities of the Keihanshin region: Osaka, Kobe, Kyoto, Himeji, and Wakayama. The lists below indicate which cities belong to which metropolitan area. Towns and villages are not listed. [edit] Osaka Metropolitan Employment AreaThe Osaka Metropolitan Employment Area has a population (as of 2000) of 12,116,540[7] and consists of the following cities:
[edit] Kyoto Metropolitan Employment AreaThe Kyoto Metropolitan Employment Area has a population (as of 2000) of 2,583,304[7] and consists of the following cities:
[edit] Kobe Metropolitan Employment AreaThe Kobe Metropolitan Employment Area has a population (as of 2000) of 2,296,268[7] and consists of the following cities:
[edit] Himeji Metropolitan Employment AreaThe Himeji Metropolitan Employment Area has a population (as of 2000) of 741,759[7] and consists of the following cities: [edit] Wakayama Metropolitan Employment AreaThe Wakayama Metropolitan Employment Area has a population (as of 2000) of 573,308[7] and consists of the following cities: [edit] Immediate commuter sphere
[edit] Major Metropolitan AreaThe Japan Statistics Bureau defines the Major Metropolitan Area or MMA (大都市圏) as the set of municipalities where at least 1.5% of the resident population aged 15 and above commute to school or work in a designated city (defined as the core area).[8] If multiple designated cities are close enough to have overlapping outlying areas, they are combined into a single multi-core area. In the 2000 census, the designated cities used to define the Keihanshin MMA were Osaka, Kobe, and Kyoto. Sakai has subsequently become a designated city. This region consists of the combination of the metropolitan areas of Osaka, Kobe, Kyoto, and Himeji, and additionally includes several periurban areas (particularly in southern Shiga Prefecture) that are not part of the four metropolitan areas. As of 2000, the entire Keihanshin region had a population of 18,643,915 over an area of 11,169 km².[2] [edit] Cities[edit] Core citiesThe core cities formed Keihanshin are government ordinance cities. These cities designated the three largest cities as special cities with Tokyo in 1889. Kobe designated the six largest cities as special cities in 1922, and adopted the ward system in 1931. Following the World War II, the six largest cities was replaced by the government designated city system in 1956. Afterwords, Sakai became the government designated city in 2006. The core cities of Keihanshin are:
[edit] Cities outside core citiesThe other cities in Osaka, Hyogo, Kyoto and Nara Prefectures are:
source: stat.go.jp census 2005 [edit] Additional citiesIn the major metropolitan area (MMA) definition used by the Japanese Statistics Bureau, the following cities in Mie, Shiga, Wakayama Prefectures are included: [edit] Mie Prefecture[edit] Shiga Prefecture
[edit] Wakayama Prefecture[edit] Border areasKeihanshin is bordered by metropolitan areas of Hikone-Nagahama (approx. 340,000) to the northeast, Iga (approx. 50,000) to the east, Himeji-Ako (approx. 800,000) to the west, Greater Wakayama (approx. 570,000 people) on the south, and Fukuchiyama (approx. 150,000) to the north. If these areas are included, Greater Keihanshin's population would be around 19-20 million. [edit] TransportationMain article: Transportation in Greater Osaka [edit] AirKansai International Airport is the main airport: it is a rectangular artificial island that sits off-shore in Osaka Bay and services Osaka and its surrounding cities of Nara, Kobe, and Kyoto. Kansai is the geographical term for the area of western Honshū surrounding Osaka. The airport is linked by a bus and train service into the centre of the city and major suburbs. Osaka International Airport, laid over the border between the cities of Itami and Toyonaka, still houses most of the domestic service from the metropolitan region. Kobe Airport, built on a reclaimed island south of Port Island, offer mainly domestic flights, too. [edit] RailGreater Osaka has a very extensive network of railway lines, comparable to that of Greater Tokyo. Main rail terminals in the city include, Umeda, Namba, Tennoji, Kyobashi, and Yodoyabashi. [edit] High Speed RailSee also: Central Japan Railway Company and West Japan Railway Company JR Central and JR West operate high-speed trains on the Tōkaidō-Sanyō Shinkansen line. Shin-Ōsaka Station is the Shinkansen terminal in Osaka. This station is connected to Ōsaka Station at Umeda by the JR Kyoto Line and the subway Midōsuji Line. All Shinkansen trains including Nozomi stop at Shin-Ōsaka Station and provide access to other major cities in Japan, such as Kyoto, Nagoya, Yokohama and Tokyo to the east, and Kobe, Okayama, Hiroshima, Kitakyushu and Fukuoka to the west. [edit] Commuter RailSee also: Keihan Electric Railway, Hankyu Railway, Hanshin Electric Railway, Kintetsu Corporation, and Nankai Electric Railway Both JR West and private lines connect Osaka and its suburbs. The commuter rail network of JR West is called the Urban Network. Major stations on the JR Osaka Loop Line include Osaka (Umeda), Tennōji, Tsuruhashi, and Kyōbashi. JR West competes with such private rail operators as Keihan Electric Railway, Hankyu Railway, Hanshin Railway, Kintetsu Corporation, and Nankai Electric Railway. The Keihan and Hankyu lines connect to Kyoto; the Hanshin and Hankyu lines connect to Kobe; the Kintetsu lines connect to Nara, Yoshino, Ise and Nagoya; and the Nankai lines connect to Osaka's southern suburbs and Kansai International Airport as well as Wakayama and Mt. Koya. Many lines in Greater Osaka accept either ICOCA or PiTaPa contactless smart cards for payment.[9] [edit] Municipal SubwayThe Osaka Municipal Subway system is a part of Osaka's extensive rapid transit system. The Metro system alone ranks 8th in the world by annual passenger ridership, serving over 912 million people annually (a quarter of Greater Osaka Rail System's 4 billion annual riders), despite being only 8 of more than 70 lines in the metro area ((see map). [edit] Economy[edit] Keihanshin Area 2006 Osaka at night
Source [11] [edit] GDP(nominal) 2006Keihanshin and Top 20 Countries. [12]
[edit] GDP (purchasing power parity) 2005Compared with other urban regions of the world, the agglomeration of Osaka is the seventh largest economy, in terms of gross metropolitan product at purchasing power parity (PPP), in 2005 according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers. [13]
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[edit] References
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