A common theme in economic geography is that increasing returns to scale at the local level are essential for explaining the geographical distribution of economic activity. These agglomerative forces are often cited as a rationale for policy intervention to attract new firms to areas.
Caution to place makers: Greater firm density does not always promote incumbent firm health
William Kerr, Oliver Falck, Christina Günther, Stephan Heblich, 11 February 2013
Topics: Industrial organisation
Tags: agglomeration, clusters, East Germany, Germany
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Is the new economic geography passé?
Marius Brülhart, 7 January 2009
In his Nobel Prize lecture on December 8, Paul Krugman argued that his core-periphery model of economic geography is in some sense becoming obsolete.
Topics: Development, Productivity and Innovation
Tags: agglomeration, clusters, economic geography, urbanisation
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- 16108 reads
Natural clusters: Why policies promoting agglomeration are unnecessary
Philippe Martin, Thierry Mayer, Florian Mayneris, 4 July 2008
Policymakers love to promote industrial clusters. Since the end of the 1980s, national and local governments in Germany, Brazil, Japan, South Korea, Spanish Basque country, and France, inter alia, have attempted to foster their development.
Topics: Microeconomic regulation, Productivity and Innovation
Tags: agglomeration, clusters, localisation economies
Spatial concentration and firm-level productivity in France
Philippe Martin, Thierry Mayer, Florian Mayneris, 16 June 2008
The analysis of agglomeration economies focuses around two separate important questions: how large the gains from agglomeration are and how much firms internalize these gains when deciding where to locate.
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URL: http://www.cepr.org/pubs/new-dps/dplist.asp?dpno=6858.asp
Topics: Productivity and Innovation
Tags: clusters, localization economies, productivity, spatial concentration
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