1 / 17

Agglomeration Economies

Agglomeration Economies. Chapter 5. To cluster or not to cluster?. a.k.a: external economies; cluster economies Agglomeration Economies: lower production costs attract clusters Diseconomies of agglomeration: very large clusters repel economic activity. Types of Agglomeration Economies.

Download Presentation

Agglomeration Economies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Agglomeration Economies Chapter 5 1

  2. To cluster or not to cluster? • a.k.a: external economies; cluster economies • Agglomeration Economies: lower production costs attract clusters • Diseconomies of agglomeration: very large clusters repel economic activity 2

  3. Types of Agglomeration Economies • Localization Economies decrease the cost of production for every firm in a specific industry. • Urbanization Economies decrease the cost of production for every firm that locates in a particular city regardless of industry. 3

  4. Benefits of clusters • Clusters may increase product demand, allowing firms to benefit from internal economies of scale. • Marshalian externalities from clusters: • Pools of specialized labor • Specialized firms • Technological spillovers 4

  5. Localization Economies • Pools of specialized labor • Easy to poach labor from competitors • Specialized training exists • Formal/informal communication (Saxonian) 5

  6. Localization Economies • Specialized resources • Backward linkages (upstream products) (supplier of inputs) • Forward linkages (downstream products) (buyer of output) • Face to face communication • JIT • Producer services (outsourcing) • Capital markets/bankers understand that industry 6

  7. Localization Economies • Technological spillovers (technological externalities) • Stimulate innovation • Often created from poached labor 7

  8. Urbanization Economies • Advantages connected with the size of an urban area regardless of industry. • Specialized labor: • Law of large numbers: lower unemployment rate if workers are willing and able to change industries. • More special services than in rural areas. 8

  9. Urbanization Economies • Specialized resources • Urban vs Rural Infrastructure • Large city projects less risky to finance • Technological spillovers • Novelty by combination from great variety of goods in a city. 9

  10. Perfectly competitive firm in long-run equilibrium 10

  11. Imperfect competitor with normal profit 11

  12. Technical average cost and total average cost curves of imperfect competitor 12

  13. Appendix: Location under Uncertainty 13

  14. 14

  15. 15

  16. 16

  17. Minimax Regret 17

More Related