12 results on '"firm location"'
Search Results
2. Where to Locate? The Correlation Between Spatial Proximity and Location Choice of New Firms: The Case of Pakistan*.
- Author
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Haroon, Maryiam and Chaudhry, Azam
- Subjects
ECONOMIES of agglomeration ,DEVELOPING countries ,BUSINESS enterprises ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The formation of new firms is an important determinant of regional economic development and agglomeration is a key factor affecting the formation and scale of operations of new firms. The present paper is among the first to explore the relationship between agglomeration economies (using localization and urbanization economies) and new firms' formation and scale of operations in a developing country. We make use of rich firm‐level data and find that agglomeration has a significant impact on the formation of new firms and their scale of operation in Punjab, Pakistan. Our findings also reveal that localization at all scales (small, medium and large) has a positive correlation with the arrival of new firms, while medium‐scale and large‐scale localization is positively correlated with the scale of operation of new firms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Serving the culture: Spatial interactions between cultural industries and advanced producer services in mainland China.
- Author
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Zhang, Xu and Li, Yajuan
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL industries , *TRANSITION economies , *ECONOMIC activity , *URBANIZATION , *ECONOMIES of agglomeration , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The location patterns and organizational networks of both advanced producer services (APS) and cultural industries have attracted extensive attention in geography and other related disciplines. However, most research on these two sectors has examined each one in isolation, without paying attention on how they are engaged with each other. Drawing on a network analysis of the inter-firm service provision relationships between 245 cultural firms and their APS providers during the firms' public listing processes in mainland China, this paper presents a pilot study of the functional interactions between cultural industries and APS from a geographical perspective. Our purpose is to expand the research on these two economic sectors from the simple mapping and ranking of their individual industrial activities to an investigation of the city-based spatial relationships between them. The outcome reveals that while the leading cultural firms and their APS intermediaries have demonstrated similar location patterns across major Chinese cities, the spatial interactions and connections between them are much more complicated than their co-location tends to suggest. This paper enriches our understanding of the functions of local clusters and trans-local networks in the establishment of inter-industrial linkages between the different sectors of knowledge economies. The paper also sheds light on the impacts of institutional context on the (spatial) development of cultural industries in a transitional economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Regional foreign direct investment and technology spillover: evidence across different clusters in India.
- Author
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Behera, Smruti Ranjan
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,ABSORPTIVE capacity (Economics) ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,ECONOMIC development ,MANUFACTURING industries - Abstract
This paper examines whether there exist productivity spillovers from foreign direct investment (FDI) to domestic firms at the regional level, using firm-level panel dataset covering 22 manufacturing industries in India from 2000 to 2012. In order to estimate the productivity spillovers from FDI at the regional level, we select 10 industrial clusters across 4 regions in India. In estimating productivity, we control for a possible simultaneity bias by using semi-parametric estimation techniques. We find that local firms benefit from horizontal and vertical FDI, but the benefits from the latter are found to be substantially stronger. The absorptive capacity of domestic firms is highly relevant to harvest the spilled technology from foreign-owned firms. Furthermore, we find that domestic firms belonging to high-technology industries benefit more from FDI at the regional level. We also find that market concentration is a crucial conduit for firm innovation, technological upgradation, and having a direct effect on local firm total factor productivity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. BROADBAND INTERNET AND NEW FIRM LOCATION DECISIONS IN RURAL AREAS.
- Author
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KIM, YOUNJUN and ORAZEM, PETER F.
- Subjects
BROADBAND communication systems ,INDUSTRIAL location ,RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIES of agglomeration - Abstract
Improving rural broadband access has been touted as a rural development strategy, but there is limited evidence that broadband service affects rural economic growth. We measure the effect of broadband deployment on location decisions of new rural firms. Location-specific fixed effects are controlled by a counterfactual baseline that measures how local broadband service in the early 2000s affected local new firm entry in the early 1990s before broadband was available anywhere. The change in location choice probability of new firms from the counterfactual baseline to the actual response ten years later is the difference-in-differences estimate of the effect of broadband deployment on locations of new firms. We find that broadband availability has a positive and significant effect on location decisions of new firms in rural areas, which is confirmed by a robustness test using ZIP Code dummy variables. The broadband effect is largest in more populated rural areas and those adjacent to a metropolitan area, suggesting that this effect increases with agglomeration economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Location determinants of high-growth firms.
- Author
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Li, Minghao, Goetz, Stephan J., Partridge, Mark, and Fleming, David A.
- Subjects
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,AMERICAN business enterprises - Abstract
County-level location patterns ofINC5000 companies provide one map of American entrepreneurship and innovativeness, and understanding the local factors associated with these firms’ emergence is important for stimulating regional economic growth and innovation. We draw on the knowledge spillover theory of entrepreneurship to motivate our regression model, and augment this theory with additional regional features that have been found to be important in the firm location literature. Zero-inflated negative binomial regressions indicate that these firms exist in counties with larger average establishment size, higher educational attainment and more natural amenities. Income growth, a mix of higher paying industries, and more banks per capita are associated with a smaller presence of these types of firms, all else equal. We conclude that the local conditions favouring high-growth firms are likely to be different from those favouring new firms in general, and that these conditions differ significantly in urban and rural areas and by industrial sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The location of initial public offering headquarters: An empirical examination.
- Author
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Cichello, Michael and Lamdin, Douglas
- Subjects
PUBLIC companies ,CORPORATE headquarters ,URBANIZATION ,GOING public (Securities) ,ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC officers - Abstract
We study the headquarters location of U.S. firms with an initial public offering (IPO) over the 2001-2011 period. Specifically, we examine IPO intensity, defined as IPOs in a state scaled by state population. We find that IPO intensity is positively related to various measures of education. We also find that IPO intensity is positively related to an economic climate (freedom) index, degree of urbanization, and whether a state contains a financial center. Some economists see IPOs as a driver of economic growth. Thus, our results suggest factors that government officials may consider to increase the number of IPOs headquartered in their states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Businesses and the need for speed: The impact of broadband speed on business presence.
- Author
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Mack, Elizabeth A.
- Subjects
BROADBAND communication systems ,COMPUTERS in business ,INTERNET speed ,RURAL development ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,RURAL telecommunication - Abstract
Highlights: [•] Models estimated to examine the linkages between broadband speed and firms. [•] Both geographic and sectoral variations in relationship of interest examined. [•] Linkages between broadband speed and agricultural and rural establishments. [•] Broadband likely substitutes for agglomerative disadvantages of more remote locales. [•] Infrastructure quality critical to economic vitality of rural communities. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Booming Bohemia? Evidence from the US High-Technology Industry.
- Author
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Bieri, David S.
- Subjects
AMERICAN business enterprises ,INDUSTRIAL location ,RESEARCH & development ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper assesses the effect of Richard Florida's creative class on economic growth and development at two levels of spatial aggregation. First, I examine the dynamics of economic growth across US metropolitan regions and investigate how they relate to regional specialization and the concentration of talent in the high-tech industry. In addition to evidence of significant high-tech clusters, I identify important complementarities with regard to the interaction between the three Ts of regional development (talent, technology and tolerance) and regional growth dynamics. Using firm-level data, the regional analysis is then complemented by exploring the location of new high-technology plant openings and their relationship with university research and development (R&D) and the creative class. Specifically, I test the hypothesis that both university R&D and the presence of “creativity” generate spillovers which are captured locally in the form of new high-tech establishments, after controlling for important location factors such as local cost, demand and agglomeration economies. While the marginal impacts of increased R&D funding on county probability for new firm formation is modest, the mix of creativity and diversity—as proxied by the Florida measure—appears to be a key driver in the locational choice of new high-tech firms. Separate estimates indicate that these findings hold up across the major high-tech industries in the USA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. BROADBAND PROVISION AND FIRM LOCATION IN OHIO: AN EXPLORATORY SPATIAL ANALYSIS.
- Author
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MACK, ELIZABETH A. and GRUBESIC, TONY H.
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION technology , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *ECONOMIC development , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *COMPETITIVE advantage in business - Abstract
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are often cited as an important factor in firm location decisions. This is especially true for firms engaged in information intensive activities and those that have a strong need for advanced services such as broadband. Despite the suggested importance of these technologies, quantitative work evaluating the link between firm location and broadband provision is sparse and existing knowledge remains largely theoretical and speculative. However, theoretical evaluations of the impact of ICTs on firm location do provide a foundation for quantitative analyses of this relationship and may be grouped into three schools of thought: the deconcentration school, the concentration school, and the heterogeneous effects school. The predictions made by these three schools of thought will be analysed in an exploratory context to better understand the relationship between firm location and ICTs, with a focus on broadband service provision. A combination of basic spatial statistical analytical tools and geographic information systems (GIS) will be used in an exploratory spatial data analysis framework to evaluate the relationship between firm location and broadband provision trends from 1999 to 2004 in the state of Ohio. Results suggest that changes in broadband provision have no relationship with changes in firm location. However, a disaggregated, firm level analysis of this relationship does provide statistically significant results for a subset of industrial sectors. Firm size is also found to impact the correlation between firm presence and broadband provision. These results suggest that firm size and industry are perhaps critical components in determining the relative importance of ICTs, such as broadband, in firm location decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Modelling the Emergence of Spatial Patterns of Economic Activity.
- Author
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Yang, Jung-Hun and Ettema, Dick
- Subjects
ECONOMIC activity ,ECONOMIC indicators ,ECONOMIC opportunities ,ECONOMIC development ,BUSINESS cycles ,SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
This paper describes a simulation model of the spatial development of economic activities over time. The key principle addressed is how spatial patterns of economic activity emerge from decisions of individual firms, which are in turn influenced by the existing spatial configuration. A stylized simulation is presented, in which two types of firms grow at different rates, giving rise to split offs and spatial relocations. The influence of the spatial pattern on individual firms' decisions is implemented in various ways, related to well-known effects such as Jacobs and Marshall externalities described in the economic literature and congestion effects. We demonstrate that different assumptions about the spatial scale of these externalities lead to different spatial configurations. Function concentration (Marshall effects) is more likely to lead to the emergence of subcentres with a specific specialisation. However, the spatial scale of the market and agglomeration effects matters. In particular, if Marshall advantages stretch out over a longer distance, more subcentres emerge. Somewhat surprisingly, congestion seems to have a minor impact on the emerging patterns. The simulation outcomes are intuitively plausible, suggesting that micro-simulation is a promising tool for developing forecasting models to support spatial and economic policies. However, they also articulate the need for validation of the behavioural decision rules, in particular by investigating how growth rates and the spatial scale of externalities differs between different industrial sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. US and EU Experiences of Tax Incentives
- Author
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Liard-Muriente, Carlos F.
- Published
- 2007
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