25 results on '"Eriksson, Rikard H"'
Search Results
2. How to enter high-opportunity places? The role of social contacts for residential mobility.
- Author
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Ilyés, Virág, Boza, István, Lőrincz, László, and Eriksson, Rikard H
- Subjects
RESIDENTIAL mobility ,SOCIAL interaction ,SOCIAL contact ,SOCIAL networks ,HOME prices ,CITIES & towns ,FIXED effects model - Abstract
The aim of this article is to analyze the contribution of social ties to moving to high-opportunity locations and assess whether their effect is more pronounced for low-income individuals as a compensation for economic resources. This is done by utilizing Swedish administrative data and by focusing on a wide range of relationships (observed directly or inferred from the data): close and distant family ties, former co-workers and university peers. For estimating the effect of social ties, we use linear probability models, where observed migration is regressed on individual-specific and target-specific characteristics. To account for the nonrandom sorting of movers between locations, we apply sending municipality–target municipality–occupation fixed effects. Our results suggest that there is a positive relationship between migration and the presence of links at given targets for all the examined contact types. The effects are even stronger if the targets are hard-to-reach municipalities (located in Stockholm County or a municipality with higher housing prices). We also demonstrate that, when moving to such opportunity-rich areas, ties to former co-workers and university peers are even more essential assets for those with limited resources. Furthermore, we show that direct help with housing through contacts is an existing factor that contributes to the effect of social networks on residential mobility. The results reinforce the idea that social ties may be of great help in reducing barriers to mobility and can be used to compensate for limited economic resources. We demonstrate the validity of our fixed-effect estimation strategy using a placebo contact approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Co-Worker complementarities and new firm survival.
- Author
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Danley, Therese and Eriksson, Rikard H
- Subjects
CONDITIONAL probability ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
In the present paper, we analyse the association between the skill composition of young firms and the firms' subsequent survival. This is made possible by means of a matched employer-employee dataset from Statistics Sweden on a cohort of firms that started between 2001 and 2003. Our findings show that, compared to firms that exit, the firms that survive at least until 2012 have teams with higher complementarity at the start, and successively increase their skill complementarity over time. Subsequent discrete time hazard models, controlling for several well-known determinants of firm longevity, show that complementarity plays a crucial role for firm survival. Higher skill synergy within firms, as compared to high degrees of substitutability, is associated with a lower conditional probability of failing. The role of skill complementarity is stable across different specifications and outweighs many other determinants of firm survival, such as starting size and experience of the founder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. How do occupational relatedness and complexity condition employment dynamics in periods of growth and recession?
- Author
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Hane-Weijman, Emelie, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Rigby, David
- Subjects
DIVERSIFICATION in industry ,LABOR market ,FINANCIAL crises ,EMPLOYMENT ,SPATIAL variation - Abstract
Related diversification has generated interest in policy (Smart Specialisation) and academic (regional branching) circles, linking path creation to regional capabilities and performance. We develop measures of occupational relatedness and complexity for local labour market areas in Sweden over the period 2002–12 to examine whether these constructs are helpful in explaining spatial and temporal variations in employment growth. The results indicate that increases in occupational relatedness are positively related to employment growth, while changes in occupational complexity have no significant impact. Separating the results either side of the global financial crisis shows that the influence of relatedness on employment is stronger pre-2008, while after the crisis building specialization in more complex occupations was positively associated with employment growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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5. Reducing automation risk through career mobility: Where and for whom?
- Author
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Czaller, László, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Lengyel, Balázs
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,AUTOMATION ,SMALL cities ,PANEL analysis ,MALE employees - Abstract
Copyright of Papers in Regional Science is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Entrepreneurship in rural regions: the role of industry experience and home advantage for newly founded firms.
- Author
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Habersetzer, Antoine, Rataj, Marcin, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Mayer, Heike
- Subjects
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,COMMUNITY development ,RURAL development ,REGIONAL planning ,RURALIZATION - Abstract
Industry experience and home advantage can have a varying influence on entrepreneurial competitiveness, depending on the regional context. We use matched employer–employee data from Statistics Sweden to analyse new firm formation in rural, urban and metropolitan regions. The results suggest that industry experience has a positive effect on firm survival, while firm growth is more influenced by home advantage. Interestingly, a positive home advantage only exists in rural regions, where native entrepreneurs create significantly more jobs than non-locals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Regional labour market effects of immigration on low-skilled workers: the case of Sweden 1990–2003.
- Author
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Adjei, Evans Korang, Andersson, Lars-Fredrik, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Scocco, Sandro
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LABOR market ,REAL wages ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,EMPLOYEES ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of immigration on the labour market outcomes of low-educated natives (i.e. residents without a university diploma). Using the labour market competition theory, which argues that the labour market effects of natives depend on the skill set of immigrants, the paper addresses whether immigrants are complementary to or substitutes for native workers. Design/methodology/approach: Longitudinal matched employer–employee data on Sweden are used to estimate how low-educated natives, in regions experiencing the greatest influx of refugees from the Balkan wars, responded to this supply shock with regard to real wages, employment and job mobility between 1990 and 2003. Findings: First, the analysis shows that low-educated native workers respond to the arrival of immigrants with an increase in real wages. Second, although employment prospects in general worsened for low-skilled workers in most regions, this is not attributable to the regions experiencing the largest supply shock. Third, there are indications that low-skilled natives in immigration-rich regions are more likely to change workplace, particularly in combination with moving upwards in the wage distribution. Originality/value: Rather than seeing an emergence of the commonly perceived displacement mechanism when an economy is subject to a supply shock, the regional findings suggest that high inflows of immigrants tend to induce a mechanism that pulls native workers upwards in the wage distribution. This is important, as the proportion of immigrants is seldom evenly distributed within a nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Labour market polarisation as a localised process: evidence from Sweden.
- Author
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Henning, Martin and Eriksson, Rikard H
- Subjects
LABOR market ,SPACE trajectories ,INDUSTRIAL clusters ,EVIDENCE - Abstract
The present article creates a link between contemporary labour market polarisation and regional divergence and analyses the spatial patterns of labour market polarisation in Swedish municipalities during the period 2002–2012. The results show that the national pattern of labour market polarisation is driven by polarisation in clusters of previously manufacturing-dominated municipalities with low- and medium-skill production, as well as increasing labour market polarisation and spatial selection within the fast-growing top-tier metropolitan regions. Outside these polarising spaces, most municipalities still experience job upgrading. The much-discussed abandonment of the traditional Western European job-upgrading model towards a polarising trajectory is thus not unequivocal. Regional labour market change and metropolitan selection cause great variation in labour market trajectories across space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Familial relationships and firm performance: the impact of entrepreneurial family relationships.
- Author
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Adjei, Evans Korang, Eriksson, Rikard H., Lindgren, Urban, and Holm, Einar
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ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,FAMILY relations ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,FAMILY-owned business enterprises ,JOB skills - Abstract
While the family may serve as a resource for entrepreneurs, it has been studied separately in different disciplines. In this paper, we combine the arguments on familial relationships (family firm literature) and skill variety (regional learning literature) to analyse how different forms of entrepreneurial family relationships (co-occurrences) facilitate firm performance, and how familial relationships moderate the effects of skill variety on firm performance. Using longitudinal data (2002–2012) on a sample of privately owned firms with up to 50 employees with matched information on all employees, our results show that entrepreneur–children relationship is the dominant dyad familial relationship in family firms. The fixed effects estimates demonstrate that entrepreneurial family relationships do affect firm performance but that this is dependent on the type of familial relationship. Children and spouses show a positive relationship with firm performance while siblings of the entrepreneur show no significant relationship with performance. The estimates further indicate that familial relationships involving spouses abate the negative effects of having too similar or too different types of skills. The paper thus contributes to new knowledge regarding not only whether family relationships matter for performance, but also in what way they matter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Co-worker Networks and Agglomeration Externalities.
- Author
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Eriksson, Rikard H. and Lengyel, Balázs
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SOCIAL networks ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,ECONOMIC geography ,EXTERNALITIES ,LABOR market - Abstract
The present article provides an initial systematic analysis of how social networks influence productivity in regional agglomerations. This is accomplished by means of matched employer-employee data for the entire Swedish economy for the period 1990-2008, allowing us to construct a weighted co-worker network with aggregated tie weights on the plant level. We find evidence that increasing density of the plant-level network has a positive effect on productivity, particularly in large regional industry-clusters with high degrees of specialization. Triadic closure of ties is, however, negatively linked to productivity, suggesting the importance of nonredundant knowledge. Moreover, we find only limited support for the notion that the diversity of linkages within or across regions as such is beneficial for productivity. Instead, we show that the degree of specialization conditions the extent to which both linkages to related industries in the region and nonlocal ties are beneficial. Our results thus suggest that having dense social networks is a crucial feature of high-performing agglomerations, and that interindustry, as well as interregional, linkages are compensatory in cases when sufficient industry specialization is absent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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11. Sectoral and geographical mobility of workers after large establishment cutbacks or closures.
- Author
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Eriksson, Rikard H., Hane-Weijman, Emelie, and Henning, Martin
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RESIDENTIAL mobility ,EMPLOYMENT reentry ,INDUSTRIES ,DIVERSIFICATION in industry ,LABOR mobility - Abstract
This paper studies redundant workers’ industrial and geographical mobility, and the consequences of post-redundancy mobility for regional policy strategies. This is accomplished by means of a database covering all workers who became redundant in major shutdowns or cutbacks in Sweden between 1990 and 2005. Frequencies of industrial and geographical mobility are described over time, and the influence of some important characteristics that make workers more likely to be subject to particular forms of mobilities are assessed. We find that re-employment rates vary extensively across industries and time. Whereas going back to the same or related industries is the most common re-employment strategy among workers who find a new job in the first year, workers who do not benefit from quick re-employment are increasingly squeezed out to new job fields and regions. Older workers and workers with high vested interest in their original industries usually employ a ‘same-industry/same-region’ strategy. This most frequent, and perhaps often most attractive, same-industry strategy comes at a cost, however. Individuals who instead pursue other mobility strategies have a lower risk of suffering from another major redundancy in the future. Thus, in terms of regional policy, strategies promoting diversification to related industries after major redundancies seem to be much more important than trying to retain workers in their old industry. In this case the route via education (university or vocational training) is important, as it increases the likelihood of successfully changing industry at time of re-employment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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12. Returning to work: regional determinants of re-employment after major redundancies.
- Author
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Hane-Weijman, Emelie, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Henning, Martin
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT reentry ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,PLANT shutdowns ,DOWNSIZING of organizations ,UNEMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Using matched employer-employee data on roughly 429,000 workers made redundant from large plant closures or major downsizing in Sweden between 1990 and 2005, this paper analyses the role of the regional industry mix (specialization, related and unrelated variety) in the likelihood of returning to work. The results show that a high presence of same or related industries speeds up the re-employment process, while high concentrations of unrelated activities do not. The role of related activities is particularly evident in the short run and in regions with high unemployment. Consequently, the prospect of successful diversification is enhanced in regions with related industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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13. Employment growth and regional development: industrial change and contextual differences between Denmark and Sweden.
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Eriksson, Rikard H., Hansen, Høgni Kalsø, and Winther, Lars
- Subjects
COMMUNITY development ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,EMPLOYMENT ,ECONOMIC development ,FREE trade - Abstract
This paper explores the potential drivers behind uneven regional development in the context of employment growth in Denmark and Sweden. In particular, we are interested in the roles of urbanization, industrial change and the rise of the new economy as manifested in the growth of the two economies in 2002–2007. The aim of this paper is, therefore, to analyse the impact of a number of key industrial sectors on regional employment growth in the two countries. The empirical analysis is based on longitudinal matched employer–employee data retrieved from official registers in each economy from 2002 to 2007, a period of strong national growth following the crisis of early 2000. Our findings indicate that the two economies follow a similar pattern in addressing total employment growth; but looking at changes in employment levels across the national borders of these two relatively similar open economies, we find that, although in general these economies react relatively similarly to changes, embarking on a narrower analysis of the individual sectors reveals marked national differences. This indicates that context matters in the analysis of regional economic dynamics in terms of structure, system and policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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14. Co-worker networks, labour mobility and productivity growth in regions.
- Author
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Lengyel, Balázs and Eriksson, Rikard H.
- Subjects
HOMOPHILY theory (Communication) ,LABOR mobility ,VECTOR autoregression model ,LABOR productivity ,ECONOMIC geography - Abstract
The mobility of workers is an important source of regional dynamics, but the effect of mobility on regional productivity growth is not straightforward, as some firms tend to win while others lose from mobility. In the present paper, we argue that the co-worker networks across plants that are established by labour moves are important for both local learning opportunities and job matching quality and should hence facilitate regional growth. We therefore propose a new homophily-biased perspective on coworker network creation and show that it suits geographical analyses better than random networks do. Moreover, panel vector autoregression models provide systematic evidence that an increase in co-worker network density is positively related to regional productivity growth. This is found to be important even when only ties across plants that are not directly linked by labour mobility are included. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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15. How do regional economies respond to crises? The geography of job creation and destruction in Sweden (1990–2010).
- Author
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Eriksson, Rikard H. and Hane-Weijman, Emelie
- Subjects
REGIONAL economics ,JOB creation ,EMPLOYMENT statistics - Abstract
Using Swedish longitudinal micro-data, the aim of this paper is to analyse how regional economies respond to crises. This is made possible by linking gross employment flows to the notion of regional resilience. Our findings indicate that despite a steady national employment growth, only the three metropolitan regions have fully recovered from the recession of 1990. Further, we show evidence of high levels of job creation and destruction in both declining and expanding regions and sectors, and that the creation of jobs is mainly attributable to employment growth in incumbent firms, while job destruction is primarily due to exits and micro-plants. Although the geography of resistance to crises and the ability of adaptability in the aftermath vary, our findings suggest that cohesive (i.e., with many skill-related industries) and diverse (i.e., with a high degree of unrelated variety) regions are more resilient over time. We also find that resistance to future shocks (e.g., the 2008 recession) is highly dependent on the resistance to previous crises. In all, this suggests that the long-term evolution of regional economies also influences their future resilience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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16. Social proximity and firm performance: the importance of family member ties in workplaces.
- Author
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Adjei, Evans Korang, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Lindgren, Urban
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FAMILIES ,ECONOMIES of agglomeration ,ECONOMIC specialization ,INDUSTRIAL clusters ,LABOR productivity ,LABOR market - Abstract
This study empirically assesses the role of social proximity, defined as the concentration of family members (FM) in firms, on firm performance. Based on longitudinal micro-data for the period 1995–2010 connecting information on workers and their workplaces in the Swedish labour market, the effects of FM (parents, children, siblings and grandparents) on per capita productivity in 15,359 firms were analysed. The results indicate that FM positively affect firm performance. In particular, the results suggest that in specialized regions (mainly small regions) FM have a positive influence on performance and can thus compensate for relative shortage of regional agglomeration economies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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17. Knowledge flows in high-impact firms: How does relatedness influence survival, acquisition and exit?
- Author
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Borggren, Jonathan, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Lindgren, Urban
- Subjects
THEORY of knowledge ,EMPLOYMENT ,BUSINESS enterprises ,ECONOMIC geography ,ABILITY ,RELATEDNESS (Psychology) ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Following the impact on regional renewal and employment ascribed to rapidly growing firms (High impact firms, HIFs) this article argues that little is still known in economic geography and business studies today regarding the mechanisms influencing growth of such firms and, hence, the potential impact on regional employment. The aim of this article is thus to explore how the qualitative content of skills (i.e. the degree of similarity, relatedness and un-relatedness) recruited to a firm during a period of fast growth, which influences its future success. Our findings, based on a sample of 1589 HIFs in the Swedish economy, suggest that it is not only the number of people employed that matters to aid understanding of the future destiny of the firms--but also, more importantly, it is the scope of the skills recruited and their proximity to related industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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18. Social proximity and firm performance: the importance of family member ties in workplaces.
- Author
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Adjei, Evans Korang, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Lindgren, Urban
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL clusters ,LABOR market ,PER capita ,ECONOMIES of agglomeration ,FAMILIES - Abstract
This study empirically assesses the role of social proximity, defined as the concentration of family members (FM) in firms, on firm performance. Based on longitudinal micro-data for the period 1995-2010 connecting information on workers and their workplaces in the Swedish labour market, the effects of FM (parents, children, siblings and grandparents) on per capita productivity in 15,359 firms were analysed. The results indicate that FM positively affect firm performance. In particular, the results suggest that in specialized regions (mainly small regions) FM have a positive influence on performance and can thus compensate for relative shortage of regional agglomeration economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. How Do Universities Contribute to Employment Growth? The Role of Human Capital and Knowledge Bases.
- Author
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Eriksson, Rikard H. and Forslund, Fredrik
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,HUMAN capital ,KNOWLEDGE base ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,TRAINING - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyse whether employment growth is faster in regions housing a university compared to non-university regions. We argue that universities per se are less likely to trigger externalities that facilitate employment growth. Instead, we propose that it depends on the concentration of different skills in that particular region. This is analysed by running a number of ordinary least Squares regressions, based on official data on a municipal level from Statistics Sweden, on how concentrations of human capital, analytic, synthetic and symbolic knowledge bases in Swedish university regions influence employment growth in 2002- 2008. The results indicate that the presence of universities per se does not influence employment growth. However, the findings suggest that university regions with high concentrations of human capital and, in particular, with employees characterized by the synthetic knowledge base, show higher growth rates. This implies that the influence of universities on employment is greatest in regions with high concentrations of skills able to apply the knowledge created in universities. Consequently, the regional composition of skills needs to match the knowledge produced by universities for significant university-induced spillovers to occur. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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20. Labour Market Externalities and Regional Growth in Sweden: The Importance of Labour Mobility between Skill-Related Industries.
- Author
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Boschma, Ron, Eriksson, Rikard H., and Lindgren, Urban
- Subjects
RURAL development ,LABOR market ,INDUSTRIAL workers ,LABOR mobility ,SKILLED labor - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Importance of Business Climate and People Climate on Regional Performance.
- Author
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Eriksson, Rikard H., Hansen, Høgni Kalsø, and Lindgren, Urban
- Subjects
COMMUNITY development ,RURAL development ,HUMAN capital ,EMPLOYMENT ,PANEL analysis ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Human Capital, Skills, and Uneven Intraurban Employment Growth: The Case of Göteborg, Sweden, 1990-2008.
- Author
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Borggren, Jonathan and Eriksson, Rikard H.
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,URBAN growth ,EMPLOYMENT ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Recent research has elucidated the role of talents to explain urban growth differences but it remains to be shown whether urban dynamics, such as human capital and a mixed local population, can be linked to intraurban employment growth. By use of a unique longitudinal database, we track the economic development through the lens of intraurban employment growth of a number of primary urban areas (PUA) in Göteborg, Sweden. Regarding factors influencing employment growth, we find that relative concentrations of human capital protect areas from rising unemployment during severe recession (1990-1993) and recovery (1990-2000) while the composition of skills is beneficial during recovery (1990-2000) and long-term growth (1990-2008). Our findings suggest that neither too high concentrations of creative occupations nor too low ones are beneficial. Thus, human capital drives much of the employment changes in relation to the recession and early transition from manufacturing to service but composition of skills is more relevant for explaining long-term intraurban employment growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Industries, skills, and human capital: how does regional size affect uneven development?
- Author
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Eriksson, Rikard H. and Hansen, Høgni Kalsø
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,ECONOMIC development ,EMPLOYMENT ,EMPIRICAL research ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This paper addresses how the composition of industry structures, skills, and human capital is related to regional development in peripheral and central locations. We do this by means of ordinary least squares models to analyse the relationship between growth in purchasing power and employment growth between 2001 and 2008 as well as a selection of variables constructed via register data of the total population in Sweden. The analysis demonstrates an evident spatial division of postindustrial development that larger regions benefit relatively more from than smaller regions do. The empirical findings indicate that a transition towards more knowledge-intensive sectors and a higher educated labour force has the strongest impact on development in the largest Swedish regions, while a transition from manual skills towards more creative skills shows a positive relationship only with development in medium-sized regions. Consequently, the paper argues that the recent appraisal of the knowledge-based economy benefits mainly the largest urban regions, meaning that regional size is an important parameter when discussing trajectories of regional development and the adaption to contemporary economic development paths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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24. Staying Power: What Influences Micro-firm Survival in Tourism?
- Author
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Brouder, Patrick and Eriksson, Rikard H.
- Subjects
TOURISM ,BUSINESSPEOPLE ,MANUFACTURING industries ,SERVICE industries ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate how previous experience and location of entrepreneurs influence the survival of new tourism firms. The paper departs from recent evolutionary economic geography advancements, highlighting the importance of routines and skills as well as location-specific knowledge for firm success. While having been well-researched for manufacturing industries characterized by high entry barriers, little knowledge is currently available on the factors influencing survival rates in service sectors with low entry barriers. A quantitative approach applies hazard models to investigate the survival rates over a seven-year period of a total of 133 new micro-tourism firms started between 1999 and 2001 in the four northernmost counties of Sweden. The geo-referenced micro-database ASTRID links information on firm features (e.g. firm births and deaths, spatial coordinates and industry codes) to characteristics of entrepreneurs (e.g. age, education, previous experience). The main finding is that entrepreneurs with previous work experience in related sectors are more likely to survive and, in this case, entrepreneurs without local experience tend to be less successful. We find no evidence that new firms operating in regions specialized in tourism have a survival advantage. Our analysis also indicates that surviving firms improve performance over time. The paper thus contributes new knowledge on the determinants of micro-firm survival in tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Localized Spillovers and Knowledge Flows: How Does Proximity Influence the Performance of Plants?
- Author
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Eriksson, Rikard H.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL clusters ,LABOR mobility ,ECONOMIC geography ,FACTORIES ,DIVERSIFICATION in industry ,AGGLOMERATION (Materials) ,SWEDISH economy - Abstract
By means of a unique longitudinal database with information on all industrial plants and employees in the Swedish economy, this article analyzes how geographic proximity influences the impact of spillovers and knowledge flows on the growth in productivity of plants. Concerning the effects of spillovers, it shows that the density of economic activities contributes mainly to the performance of plants within a short distance and that the composition of economic activities is more influential farther away. Regarding the influence of the local industrial setup, proximity increases the need to be located near different, but related, industries, whereas increased distance implies a greater effect of intraindustry spillovers. The analyses also demonstrate that knowledge flows via the mobility of skilled labor are primarily a subregional phenomenon. Only inflows of skills that are related to the existing knowledge base of plants and come from fewer than 50 kilometers away have a positive effect on the performance of plants. Concerning outflows of skills, the results indicate that it is less harmful for a dispatching plant if a former employee remains within the local economy rather than leaves it for a job in another part of the national economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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