9 results
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2. The spatial dimension of economic growth and convergence.
- Author
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Bode, Eckhardt and Rey, Sergio J.
- Subjects
REGIONAL economics ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence ,SPACE in economics ,ECONOMIC models ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing - Abstract
The article aims to explain regional economic development and economic convergence under the theme of spatial econometrics. The major idea behind the economic convergence is decreasing returns to capital accumulation. The economic convergence can be achieved by variety of theoretical and statistical models. There are so many advanced studies came out. They will facilitate convergence model specification and statistical testing for better efficiency.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Public investment and regional growth and convergence: Evidence from Greece* Public investment and regional growth and convergence: Evidence from Greece.
- Author
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Rodríguez-Pose, Andrés, Psycharis, Yannis, and Tselios, Vassilis
- Subjects
PUBLIC investments ,REGIONAL economics ,TRANSPORTATION policy ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence ,EXTERNALITIES ,FISCAL policy - Abstract
This paper estimates the impact of public investment on regional economic growth and convergence at the NUTS 3 level in Greece. Using a new database of public expenditure per region for the period 1978-2007, it proposes a model which captures not just the impact of public investment in Greek prefectures, but also the spillover effects related to the existence of externalities from neighbouring regions. The results point to a positive long-run impact of public investment per capita on regional economic growth - but not on convergence - which also generates considerable spillover effects. However, the returns vary according to different types of public investment, with education and infrastructure spillovers having the highest impact. In general, public investment externalities seem to be more relevant for regional growth than direct public investment in each region. Finally, the impact of different types of public investment in Greece is mediated by politics and political factors, but the effect of politics disappears once we control for political-period-specific spatial-invariant variables. Resumen Este artículo estima el impacto de la inversión pública en el crecimiento económico regional y la convergencia a nivel NUTS 3 en Grecia. Haciendo uso de una nueva base de datos de gasto público por región para el periodo 1978-2007, se propone un modelo que identifica no solamente el impacto de la inversión pública en las prefecturas griegas, sino también los efectos de spillover relacionados con la existencia de externalidades procedentes de regiones vecinas. Los resultados apuntan a un impacto positivo a largo plazo de la inversión pública per cápita en el crecimiento económico regional - pero no en la convergencia - el cual genera unos efectos de spillover considerables. Sin embargo, los retornos varían de acuerdo con los diferentes tipos de inversión pública, siendo la educación y los spillovers de infraestructura los de mayor impacto. En general, las externalidades de inversión pública parecen tener una mayor relevancia para el crecimiento regional que la inversión pública directa en cada región. Para terminar, el impacto de los diferentes tipos de inversión pública en Grecia se ve influido por sus políticas y otros factores políticos, pero el efecto de las políticas desaparece una vez que se controlan las variables espacialmente-invariantes de tipo político ligadas a un periodo específico. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Crime and regional economic growth in Mexico: A spatial perspective.
- Author
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Torres‐Preciado, Víctor Hugo, Polanco‐Gaytán, Mayrén, and Tinoco‐Zermeño, Miguel A.
- Subjects
SOCIAL conditions in Mexico ,ECONOMIC impact of crime ,REGIONAL economics ,ECONOMIC development ,REGIONAL economic disparities ,TWENTY-first century - 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
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The duelling models: NEG vs amenity migration in explaining US engines of growth.
- Author
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Partridge, Mark D.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC geography ,ECONOMIC development ,REGIONAL economics ,AMENITY migration ,UNITED States economy - Abstract
The new economic geography (NEG) has become a mainstay of regional science in the last two decades, as signified by the awarding of Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize. Yet, most American regional scientists and urban/regional economists do not use NEG in determining regional growth patterns. Instead, they rely on factors such as natural amenity migration, whose roots lie back to the work of Philip Graves in the mid 1970s. Conversely, two of the world's leading economic geographers – Allen Scott and Michael Storper – have strongly argued that job availability not household amenities have determined US regional dynamics. Given the disparity of views over the largest developed economy in the world, we hold a competition to determine which of these leading contenders accurately predict US interregional growth dynamics over the last 40–60 years. The runaway winner of the duel is natural amenity led growth with the crown going to Graves. Implications are drawn for both empirical research and EU economic integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Culture and regional economic development: Evidence from China.
- Author
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Shi, Shuxing, Huang, Kunming, Ye, Dezhu, and Yu, Linhui
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *REGIONAL economics , *ECONOMIC statistics , *GROSS domestic product , *CAPITALISM ,ECONOMIC conditions in China, 2000- - Abstract
Empirical research on the determinants of regional economic development typically neglects the influence of culture. This study fills that gap by attempting to establish a causal linkage between culture and economic development in the Chinese context. Our empirical analyses are based on a comprehensive economic statistics of China's provinces and prefectures during 1978 to 2008. We use Protestantism as a proxy for culture because Protestant ethic has been linked to the spirit of capitalism and commercial culture in Weber's famous work. To isolate the exogenous variation in culture measure, historical Protestant dissemination is employed as instruments. The estimation results suggest that Christian commercial culture has a significantly positive impact on economic performance - per capita GDP after other important influences (i.e., capital, population, human resources, institutional quality, trade, infrastructure, geography, etc.) are controlled for. We also find heterogeneous effects of culture on economic development in different regions of China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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7. The environment in regional science: An eclectic review.
- Author
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Batabyal, Amitrajeet A. and Nijkamp, Peter
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL law , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *REGIONAL economics , *ECONOMIC development , *SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
The environment, broadly construed, is increasingly a salient topic in regional science research. Theoretical and empirical inquiries by regional scientists have progressively begun to address the manifold environmental ramifications of regional science questions. As such, there now exists a sizeable literature on what we may call the environment in regional science. Given this state of affairs, the purpose of this article is to survey this extensive literature. To provide sufficient focus,we do this by discussing five key issues in the extant literature on the environment in regional science. These issues are: (i) regional economic development, (ii) environmental regulation, (iii) natural resources, (iv) international affairs, and (v) geographic information systems. Our survey is both retrospective and prospective in nature. We are interested not only in what has been accomplished thus far but also in where research on the environment in regional science is headed in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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8. Growth,development,and innovation: A look backward and forward.
- Author
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Cheshire, Paul C. and Malecki, Edward J.
- Subjects
- *
REGIONAL economics , *ECONOMIC development , *URBAN economics , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This article reviews where we have come from and where we are going in research on regional growth and development. Our object of study is the region, an imprecise term that has been taken to mean areas as large as small countries or as small as urban regions, although how regions are defined does itself have implications for both theories and the empirics of regional growth. How growth occurs remains a poorly understood process. Clearly the basic ingredients of the neo-classical cookbook are important--growth in capital and labour stocks with technological change--but they are neither enough nor revealing enough. Why does the stock of capital grow at different rates? Why does the labour supply increase? What drives technical progress? What are the roots of spatial dependence? We are fairly certain that the answers to these questions embrace agglomeration economies but they also embrace much more. Innovation is associated with research and development and has an identifiable spatial pattern in relation to highly skilled labour and institutions such as universities. But innovation is not just the result of R&D but also entrepreneurship applied to investment. Labour supply responds to real wage differentials but also to environmental and other amenities. Labour is far more geographically mobile in the New World, however, than it is in the Old. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Demand for information and communication technology-based services and regional economic development.
- Author
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de Castro, Eduardo Anselmo and Jensen-Butler, Chris
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION technology , *REGIONAL economics , *ECONOMIC convergence , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The relationship between the uptake of Information and Communication Technology-based services (ICT) and regional economic development is examined here; we address in particular the idea that ICT will promote regional economic convergence. We argue that ICT can generate contradictory trends of regional convergence and divergence and that, under conditions of non-regulated market supply, the effects leading to divergence can be dominant. The approach is based on the development of a regional demand model, which is the combination of two sub models, one dealing with the effects of network externalities and the other based on the concept of potential demand for ICT. The main conclusion is that less populous, more peripheral and poorer regions with weaker existing social and economic networking will encounter problems of insufficient demand. This in turn will delay the launch of new services and slow the rate of uptake. Negative dynamic effects of low ICT use on economic performance will generate a vicious circle of cumulative disadvantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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