쉐도잉 연습: Why China Is Building the World’s First $2 Trillion Megacity - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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You're looking at the largest continuous urban area the world has ever seen.
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You're looking at the largest continuous urban area the world has ever seen.
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86 million people fused into a single $2 trillion economic engine.
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It's known as China's Greater Bay Area.
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It's a bold, very ambitious attempt by the Chinese government to integrate 11 cities.
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For China, this is just the start.
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Its latest five-year plan pivots from individual cities to a focus on mega-regional China,
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a network of 19 massive clusters with the Greater Bay Area as a primary engine for growth.
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China is relying a great deal on the Greater Bay Area
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to provide this kind of a powerhouse innovative economy with a long-term goal.
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Smaller cities connecting into larger ones goes back millennia.
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Yet we're no longer talking about a few thousand merchants following a trade route,
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but instead hundreds of millions of people integrated into a single labor market.
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Where gaps once took centuries to close,
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rail lines and relentless paving are swallowing the landscape at a rate of kilometers per day.
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After 6,000 years of urbanism,
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cities are becoming larger and larger.
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Every single city is continuing to draw in more
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and more people for the kinds of opportunities that they can't get in any other sort of place.
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Economists believe that unifying the world's massive urban centers can revitalize economies and redefine the rules of growth.
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What happens here in China could be a blueprint for the future of humanity.
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This is China's Megalopolis project.
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For 99% of history, humans lived nomadically in small, scattered groups.
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Then they began to settle,
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and 6,000 years ago, humans built the first cities.
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People came together and then gradually found more and more opportunities for employment,
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for education, and even for entertainment.
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And that promise is still true today.
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Cities offer jobs, drive innovation,
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and most importantly, they offer choice.
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They draw people in even though they have some objective disadvantages.
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Cities can be crowded, polluted.
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We know that diseases can travel more quickly in a city.
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And yet, you can't keep people out of them.
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The 11 cities within China's Greater Bay Area are some of the most productive economic centers in the world.
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They're among the most crowded,
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and the region is about to get even more densely packed.
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An entire metropolis is being built in a rural strip of land in northern Hong Kong that will fill in the gaps,
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physically connecting Hong Kong to the larger Greater Bay Area.
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On the north side, the Shenzhen side, you can see skyscrapers.
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But then on the Hong Kong side,
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you see fish ponds, farmlands,
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a lot of green areas.
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These two territories are just separated by a rather narrow river.
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That river is the front line of what's branded as Northern Metropolis,
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a utopian, multi-billion dollar plan to develop the area into a tech hub,
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housing everything from cutting-edge laboratories to promising startups,
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while physically bridging the gap with mainland China.
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Development here used to trigger protests.
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But later, after the government's imposition of its national security law and crackdown on mass democracy protests,
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local opposition more broadly has been silenced,
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removing potential obstacles for developers.
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I think they're more of a state of resignation or acceptance
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because they know that development will go ahead All they can do is just accept their fate.
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I think the biggest loss will be the untouched wildlife areas,
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but most of all, the local communities.
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I was born in this village,
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in a house over there,
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which was a wooden hut.
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I was really born in that wooden hut.
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My mum would bring me here on weekends and all my uncles
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and their children were around here and they'd teach me farm things like how to build bonfires.
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It's different looking over a public park than it is looking over a real wildlife hilly area.
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Everywhere around it is starting lots of buildings and roads changing everyday.
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And I think we won't be there here for too long.
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I think if this is a choice,
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you don't want to ask me.
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I think most people, if there are a choice,
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I would also be in a small house in the village.
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There's a space I don't want to live.
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Now there's no choice.
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For the Hong Kong farmers,
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the northern metropolis will proceed as planned,
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with the government offering cash and public housing to relocate eligible farmers and villagers.
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But there is skepticism among local developers,
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and Shenzhen's tech giants remain separated from Hong Kong by a real-world border and clashing financial systems.
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I don't think the government can just say,
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this will become the center of a city and people will move there.
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We've seen that fail so many times all over the world.
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In China, that government-driven building led to ghost cities,
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massive infrastructure projects that lay empty for years.
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But over time, at least some of those projects did fill up,
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proving that if done in the right way,
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the if-you-build-it-they-will-come method can work.
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So when we think about what makes a planned or new city successful,
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we often should look right next door and see who its neighbors are.
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The emergence of a city is something that usually starts out as a village or a small town,
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between places that are mapped out on the ground.
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So if we think about Shenzhen,
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that's right between Hong Kong and Guangzhou.
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Shenzhen may be the fastest growing planned city in human history.
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By the year 2000, a million people are expected to live in Shenzhen.
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By the year 2000, there were actually seven million people living in Shenzhen.
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It's now a megacity of 18 million people
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that was essentially willed into existence by the Chinese government due to its strategic proximity to Hong Kong and Guangzhou,
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the capital city and cultural heart of China's southern Guangdong province.
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Basically, it seems like overnight China became a technological leader,
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largely due to Shenzhen and the cities in Guangdong.
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We are about to start.
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Please make sure you...
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AI, robotics, semiconductors, clean tech, and autonomous driving.
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These are not just industries that the Chinese government is showing off to impress the world.
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They're actually important drivers for the future.
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Now, the Chinese government wants to build upon Shenzhen's success.
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For the 11 cities in the Greater Bay Area,
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that means utilizing each individual city's strengths to propel China towards a high-tech future driven by innovation.
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Let's say you're a startup in Shenzhen,
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you go to Hong Kong,
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raise money, use that money,
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create a prototype in Shenzhen,
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And from there, if it works,
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you make it in scale in Guangzhou,
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and then you launch it in Macau.
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It sounds logical in theory,
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but getting the region to be a seamless,
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integrated economy could be much harder in practice.
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What makes it very interesting is Hong Kong and China got different political systems,
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common law, you know, socialist market economy,
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different tax regimes, visa regimes, and all that.
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So how do you sort of merge these disparate systems?
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Hong Kong, which China considers one of the four core cities within the 11 strong Greater Bay Area,
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has its own legal system,
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currency and passports, and along with Macau,
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is separated by a border.
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And that makes integration through the Northern Metropolis project a government priority.
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Northern Metropolis is the engine for us,
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not just for growth, but for uplifting as well.
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Right.
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But this engine is part of a much larger,
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high-stakes transition for China, away from things like textiles,
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cheap electronics, and a relentless boom in real estate.
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Those engines are faltering.
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The Growth has slowed significantly as the country hits a wall known as the middle income trap.
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Moving from middle to high income requires a very steep increase in productivity.
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This is the ratcheting up of productivity among firms and labor
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that will move China from a middle income to a high income country over the next 10 years.
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Cities thrive when they don't have borders.
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Innovation succeeds through more integration,
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bringing together the people, the ideas, the customs.
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Information is exchanged through meetings, luncheons, mobility of labor.
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And that means you have to be within half an hour,
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an hour of the location of economic activity,
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in this case, the location of innovative activities,
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and that is Sun Sun.
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So I think it's become much more of what I call an economic political objective,
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a regional program, and has very many complex dimensions.
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While Hong Kong's loss of a distinct physical and political frontier is unique,
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its struggle might be a signal of what's to come.
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Across the globe, the individual city is being swallowed by something much larger.
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From the Abidjan-Lagos corridor in Africa to the North East corridor of the US,
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the world is gravitating towards the mega-regions.
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But as the fish ponds are filled with concrete and the skyscrapers rise,
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what will be lost in the pursuit of a hyper-efficient future?
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You should remember that some people like living like this.
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You take it for granted and then other people come
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and they've never picked something and then eaten it or touched a goat or a pig.
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It's something you won't know that you've got till it's gone.
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For some, dystopia is simply giving up natural land and old ways of life ways of life for the sake of development,
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but for others, that same development is a utopia,
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a necessary leap into a high-tech future.
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When people say, can we be economically successful and not be a concentrated urban or regional center,
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the answer is you cannot be.
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People move to where the jobs are.
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The same thing is true in the United States.
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So the Greater Bay Initiative,
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the concept requires concentration of activities.
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But you can manage it well or you can manage it poorly.
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And your success depends upon whether you are able to do so.
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But a city's success isn't just about the political will to build it.
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It's about the people's ability to live in it.
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For China, the reimagining of the urban landscape is an economic priority.
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And in a world where economic activity is naturally pulling towards massive clusters,
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China isn't just following the trend,
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it's attempting to engineer its outcome.

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주요 어휘 및 구문

  • 메가시티 - Mega City
  • 경제 엔진 - Economic Engine
  • 혁신적 경제 - Innovative Economy
  • 노동 시장 - Labor Market
  • 도시화 - Urbanization
  • 기술 허브 - Tech Hub
  • 지역 개발 - Regional Development
  • 환경 오염 - Environmental Pollution

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