This study examines the extent to which smart cities are expressions of nationally homogeneous development trends by way of an analysis of their structural characteristics from a multivariate viewpoint. Drawing on data from the International Institute for Management Development IMD Smart City Index 2024, we find a sample of 102 cities across the world clustering along six key dimensions of smartness: mobility, environment, government, economy, people, and living. The aim is to examine if cities within a country have similar profiles and, if so, to what degree such similarity translates to other macro-level institutional, political, and cultural conditions. Our results verify a tight correspondence between city profiles and national contexts, implying that macro-level governance arrangements, policy coordination, and institutional capacity are pivotal in influencing local smart city development. Planned centralised countries possess more uniform city characteristics, while decentralised nations possess more variant urban policies. This study contributes to international debate regarding smart cities by empirically identifying national directions of urban innovation. It offers pragmatic inputs for policymakers that aim to align local efforts with overall sustainable development agendas. Moreover, this study introduces a novel application of Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) to classify smart city profiles based on national models. While the analysis yields high classification accuracy, it is important to note that the sample is skewed toward cities from the Global North, potentially limiting the generalisability of the results.
National Models of Smart City Development: A Multivariate Perspective on Urban Innovation and Sustainability
Enrico Ivaldi;Tommaso Fili';Tiziano Pavanini;Enrico Musso
2025-01-01
Abstract
This study examines the extent to which smart cities are expressions of nationally homogeneous development trends by way of an analysis of their structural characteristics from a multivariate viewpoint. Drawing on data from the International Institute for Management Development IMD Smart City Index 2024, we find a sample of 102 cities across the world clustering along six key dimensions of smartness: mobility, environment, government, economy, people, and living. The aim is to examine if cities within a country have similar profiles and, if so, to what degree such similarity translates to other macro-level institutional, political, and cultural conditions. Our results verify a tight correspondence between city profiles and national contexts, implying that macro-level governance arrangements, policy coordination, and institutional capacity are pivotal in influencing local smart city development. Planned centralised countries possess more uniform city characteristics, while decentralised nations possess more variant urban policies. This study contributes to international debate regarding smart cities by empirically identifying national directions of urban innovation. It offers pragmatic inputs for policymakers that aim to align local efforts with overall sustainable development agendas. Moreover, this study introduces a novel application of Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) to classify smart city profiles based on national models. While the analysis yields high classification accuracy, it is important to note that the sample is skewed toward cities from the Global North, potentially limiting the generalisability of the results.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



