body bg

Inform-Banner

Specialization and Regional Economic Development

  • Year: 2012
  • Author: Thomas Kemeny, Michael Storper
  • Journal Name: SERC Discussion Paper
  • Journal Number: No. 121
  • Publisher: Spatial Economics Research Centre
  • Published Location: London, United Kingdom

Debates about urban growth and change often center on specialization.However, arguments linking specialization to metropolitan economic development contain diverse, and sometimes conflicting, claims. Is it better to be highly specialized or diversified? Does specialization refer to the absolute scale of an activity in a region, its share within the regional economy, or its share in the nation’s economy? Does specialization have static effects, or is its impact chiefly evolutionary? This paper starts by investigating these different theoretical claims. We then turn to an empirical inquiry into the roles of relative and absolute specialization. By analyzing local agglomerations over time, we find that growing absolute specialization is positively linked to wages, while changes in relative concentration are not significantly associated with wage dynamics. This supports notions of specialization based on the absolute size of an agglomeration, and casts doubt on notions of specialization based on shares of an activity in the regional economy.

Related Items

Medical workforce 2012

The supply of employed medical practitioners in Australia increased from 323.2 to 355.6 full-time...

Regional Development Australia Yorke and Mid North Infrastructure Audit 2012 |

Integral to the social and economic growth of all regional communities is its infrastructure....

Hearing health outreach services to Indigenous children and young people in the Northern Territory 2012–13 and 2013–14

This report presents information on ear and hearing outreach services funded by the Department of...

Share this with your friends

Footer Logo

Contact Us

Level 2, 53 Blackall Street
Barton ACT 2600
AUSTRALIA
Telephone: 02 6260 3733
or email us