Industrial Location and Economic Integration

Hardback

Industrial Location and Economic Integration

Centrifugal and Centripetal Forces in the New Europe

9781840642100 Edward Elgar Publishing
Barbara Dluhosch, Institute for Economic Policy, University of the Federal Armed Forces, Germany
Publication Date: 2000 ISBN: 978 1 84064 210 0 Extent: 208 pp
In recent decades the world economy has been characterized by deepening and widening integration. Throughout this time, there have been concerns that this process may foster the geographical concentration of industries, a view substantiated by contributions to the new economic geography. In this book, Barbara Dluhosch opposes this position and presents an entirely different view of the consequences of globalization.

Copyright & permissions

Recommend to librarian

Your Details

Privacy Policy

Librarian Details

Download leaflet

Print page

More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contents
More Information
In recent decades the world economy has been characterized by deepening and widening integration. Throughout this time, there have been concerns that this process may foster the geographical concentration of industries, a view substantiated by contributions to the new economic geography. In this book, Barbara Dluhosch opposes this position and presents an entirely different view of the consequences of globalization.

Barbara Dluhosch carefully identifies and analyses the main pillars of the new economic geography. She then presents an essentially new approach focusing on the decline of communication costs, and introduces cost competition and technological choice, which have largely been neglected. In doing so, she arrives at fundamentally different conclusions and provides new insights into the consequences of regional integration and the process of globalization. Finally, the policy implications of this are critically evaluated by drawing on experiences of European economic integration.
Critical Acclaim
‘This is an important and readable book that deserves to make significant impact on the European economic development debate.’
– Robert J. Bennett, Progress in Human Geography

‘. . . this book reveals a considerable amount of thoroughness and synthesis most of the available knowledge on convergence versus divergence within Europe. It opens appealing research avenues and I hope it will stimulate fruitful discussions among rural development and regional scientists.’
– Yves Léon, European Review of Agricultural Economics

‘The book is a valuable contribution to the most important economic event of the new millennium. The book offers refreshingly new insight to the different dimensions of the problems from such integration and, therefore, it is a must for researchers and policymakers.’
– Pradosh Nath, Journal of Scientific and Industrial Research

‘Barbara Dluhosch calls into question the common wisdom – in vogue since the work of Helpman and Krugman – that economic integration always makes the big get better and the small go south. She arrays a number of powerful arguments, all with competition as a basic theme, that can reverse the centripetal force often presumed to dominate economic integration, even while remaining within an imperfect competition framework of analysis. Cost competition on the supply side drives firms to fragment production and spread these activities spatially, while increases in consumer choice raise effective elasticities on the demand side. The evidence presented on Europe is indeed supportive of the view that convergence, and not divergence, better characterizes economic integration there over the last three decades.’
– Michael Burda, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany

‘This is an interesting and inspiring book. The main innovations of this study are the incorporation of the Lancastrian model of demand for commodity characteristics into the love-of-variety approach à la Dixit and Stiglitz and a non-conventional modelling of production technology. These modifications of existing models help to better understand and explain some of the phenomena that have been experienced in historical processes of integration. This study demonstrates possibilities to bridge existing gaps between traditional trade theory and the new economic geography . . . her approach is highly innovative, it produces new and interesting insights and paves a way for future research in this area.’
– Michael Rauscher, University of Rostock, Germany
Contents
Contents: Preface 1. Integration and Economic Development: Is History Destiny? 2. Stylised Facts on EU-wide Geographical Disparities 3. Centripetal Forces Dominating: The Home Market Effect 4. Centrifugal Forces Dominating: The Foreign Market Effect 5. EU Cohesion: A Matter of Income Distribution? 6. Reprise: History is not Destiny Bibliography Index
eBook for individuals
978 1 78254 147 9
From £25.00
Click here for options
eBook for library purchase
978 1 78254 147 9
View sample chapter and check access on:
eBook options

Available for individuals to buy from these websites

Or recommend to your institution to acquire on Elgaronline
  • Buy as part of an eBook subject collection - flexible options available
  • Downloading and printing allowed
  • No limits on concurrent user access, ideal for course use
My Cart