Transcript Chapter 2

Infrastructure, Agglomeration,
Cluster Development and
Cluster Policy
Sayed H. Saghaian (Mehdi),
Associate Professor
University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky
Economic Geography
 What happens where?
 Why do firms and people tend to concentrate in a
few locations ?
 What explains the variety of economic activities
and land uses in a region?
 What are the economic diversification prospects
for low-population places that are costly to get to
and from?
 Why some regions achieve significantly higher
growth rates than others?
Economic Geography
 Spatial Economics

Understanding the role of distance
 Theory of Spatial Equilibrium
 Production Location Theory
 Land Economics

Study of land use and value
 Regional Economics

Sub-national economics
 Rural Economics
 Urban Economics
Foundation Stones
 Three foundation stones: an understanding of
spatial and regional economic problems built on
three facts of life:
Natural resource advantages,
 Economies of concentration, and
 Costs of transportation and communication.

 A fundamental view: the importance of trade-offs
among:
Scale,
 Transport costs, and
 Endowments
in explaining the economics of establishment location.

Urban-Rural
 The important role of local public goods and
amenities to explain household and
establishment location choices.
 The emergence of auto transport by mid–
twentieth century made commuting to urban
employment the mode to engage with urban
economies.
 Increased accessibility to urban markets key
factor to prosperity of regions.
Urban-Rural
 Urban growth cause of rural-brain-drain
 The pull effect of the higher urban returns to human
capital


Highest skilled will leave
Exurban sprawl fuel adjacent rural growth
 Job growth complementary to population growth
through increased commuting.

60% of local non-metro job growth is due to commuting,
30% through migration.
Urban Centers
 Urban centers and spatial concentration of
production provide:
Product variety:
 Intermediate inputs for firms
 Final goods to consumers
 Monopolistic competition (more firms)
 Average cost pricing
 Higher profits

Agglomeration
 It is geographic concentration of related
economic activities.
 The agglomeration of related economic activity
is a central feature of economic geography.
 Agglomeration arises from interdependencies
across complementary economic activities that
give rise to increasing returns.
 Trade-Offs:
 Either enjoying agglomeration economies of scale,
 or avoiding transportation costs wrt spatially
immobile resources.
Agglomeration
 Two potential types of agglomerating forces:
 localization (increasing returns to activities within a single
industry) and
 urbanization (increasing returns to diversity at the overall
regional level).
 Agglomeration may arise from:
 specialization of a region in a particular industry where
firms share common inputs or knowledge (so called
localization economies).
 exploiting the overall diversity of industries in an entire
regional economy (so called urbanization economies).
Agglomeration
 At least three distinct drivers of agglomeration:
input-output linkages,
 labor market pooling, and
 knowledge spillovers.

 Additional agglomeration drivers:
local demand,
 specialized institutions and
 the structure of regional business and social networks

Agglomeration


In a given location, limitations on resources can result in
diminishing returns.
This can lead to convergence in economic activity
(employment, income, productivity) across regions over time
 Each of those mechanisms is associated with cost or
productivity advantages that result in increasing
returns to geographically proximate economic
activity.

Free trade remove barriers to agglomeration and foster
growth of clusters.

Clustering of economic activity is wisely recognized as
resulting in economies of agglomeration.
What is Competitiveness?
 Competitiveness is the productivity with which a
nation uses its human, capital, and natural resources




Productivity sets the standard of living
Productivity growth sets sustainable economic growth
Productivity and prosperity depends on how a nation
competes, not what industries it competes in
Relentless innovation necessary to drive productivity growth
and enable standard of living to rise

Technology, products, and organizational methods
Competitiveness & Diamond Framework
 Many things matter for competitiveness:
 Successful economic development is a process of
successive upgrading, in which the business
environment improves to enable increasingly
sophisticated ways of competing.
 Porter Diamond Model for Competitive Advantage

The Diamond Framework has four dimensions:
Context for Firm Strategy and Rivalry
 Factor (Input) Conditions
 Demand Conditions
 Related and Supporting Industries

Diamond Framework
Diamond Framework
Diamond Framework
Context for Firm Strategy and Rivalry
 A local context and rules that encourage
productivity

incentives for capital investments and intellectual
property protection


Incentive systems based on merit
Open and vigorous local competition, especially among
locally based rivals
Factor (Input) Conditions
 Availability of high quality, specialized inputs
available to firms:
Human resources
 Capital resources
 Physical infrastructure
 Administrative infrastructure (e.g. registration, permits)
 Information infrastructure (e.g. economic data, corporate
disclosure)
 Scientific and technological infrastructure
 Natural resources

Demand Conditions
 More sophisticated and demanding local
customer(s)
 Local customer needs that anticipate those
elsewhere
 Unusual local demand in specialized
segments that can be served nationally and
globally
Related and Supporting Industries
 Access to capable, locally based
suppliers and firms in related
fields
 Presence of
clusters instead
of isolated industries
What is a Cluster?
 Michael Porter defines clusters as “geographically
proximate groups of interconnected companies and
associated institutions in a particular field, linked by
commonalities and complementarities”.
 Clusters have become the focal point of many new
policy initiatives globally in the last few years.
 The goal is to become the most competitive and
dynamic knowledge based economy.


Clusters are a leverage point for action, not just a description
of economic reality.
A way to realize location-based complementarities.
Anatomy of a Cluster
Federal
Agencies
Labor
Organizations
Sources of
Capital
Support Industries
Workforce
Development
& Training
Driver Industries:
Suppliers:
Local &
State Gov’t
Customers:
Public
Infrastructure
Universities
Nonprofits
Community
& Technical
Colleges
Cluster Characteristics
 Firms and institutions in a cluster share four critical
characteristics:





Proximity; they need to be sufficiently close in space to allow
positive spill-overs and sharing of common resources to occur
Linkages; their activities need to share a common goal, for
them to be able to benefit from proximity and interaction
Interactions; for positive cluster effects to occur some level of
active interaction has to be present
Critical mass; needs to be sufficient number of participants for
interactions to have a meaningful impact on performance
Understanding these four dimensions is more important than
defining specific benchmarks for firms and institutions to be
called a cluster.
Clusters and Innovation
 Clusters allow to be more productive and innovative.
 Clusters provide a particularly fertile ground for
innovations.
 Clusters reduce barriers to entry for new business
creation relative to other locations.
 Innovation occurs in non-sequential interactions of
different universities, research institutions, and
companies.

Different from traditional model where R&D centers turned
universities’ basic research into applied products and processes.
 Clusters of Innovation: locations face to compete on
innovation and productivity.
Roles of Private and Public Sectors
 Cluster initiatives an opportunity to redefine the
roles of the private and public sector in economic
policy.

Economists focus on clusters as geographic concentration
of interconnected companies and institutions in a
particular field.
 Clusters offer a crucial opportunity to take the
necessary steps for modernizing economic
policies.
Cluster and Macro Policy
 The turn to cluster policy is a shift in priorities from
macro to microeconomic issues.


Monetary and fiscal policies are increasingly well understood.
But macroeconomic progress turned out to be only necessary,
not sufficient to achieve higher prosperity.
 Targeted microeconomic efforts in a new partnership
with private sector, universities, and other
institutions is required to translate the
macroeconomic achievements into real productive
improvements.
Cluster Development
 Efforts for cluster development and for regional
economic development need to be better integrated.



Cluster development should not aim to create clusters, but to
activate them.
Activating an existing base of companies and institutions to
jointly upgrade their cluster is more effective than creating
clusters from scratch.
The state of cluster development is a measure of active
policies to strengthen clusters, and the overall cluster rank is
a measure of necessary ingredients for clusters.
Cluster Policy
 Clusters are a useful way to organize efforts and
launch effective action initiatives.

Need to strengthen home clusters to exploit their roles.
 Cluster Policy:
 provide budget for cluster development, and use clusters to
set policy priorities.
 Providing better data on clusters, convening joint
public-private research groups for clusters, and
supporting regional cluster initiatives are the key
roles.
Cluster Mapping
 Employing cluster approach to regional growth
policy is crucial.

regional employment patterns in groups of industries could be
defined as clusters.
 There is a need for a Cluster Mapping Project.
 cluster mapping: quantitatively identify and profile clusters.
 cluster mapping efforts could cover municipalities, counties,
urban economies, or national economies.
 need to conduct and compile cluster case studies.
Policy and Practice Must Change
Unprecedented challenges require innovative solutions
for creating jobs and promoting regional prosperity.
From Silos …
… to Collaboration.
Economic and Industry
Policy: maintaining a robust
economy in which innovative
activity thrives and supporting
industry development.
Regional
Policy:
building
competitive
regions by
developing skills
and initiatives
that boost local
economic
activity
Education
Policy:
identifying skill
shortages and
training needs
for re-skilling or
up-skilling and
investing in skill
development
programs.
Science and technology
policy: supporting collaborative
research involving networks with
industry and stimulating the
commercialization of research.
Regional Clusters
 Implies bounded area
characterized by
inherent social,
environmental,
economic, and cultural
assets
 Transcends sociopolitical boundaries
 Include both urban &
rural
Regional Assets
Five Key Components to Consider When Defining Unique
Regional Assets:
What you make,
including your existing
& prospective industry
clusters
What you do: your
workforce skills &
human capital base
ECONOMIC
BASE
TALENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
INNOVATION
& IDEAS
Location, Infrastructure,
Amenities, Factor Costs, Natural
Resources
The basic conditions defining the
economic milieu of the region
Your capacity to
create companies
wholly new or from
existing firms
Your capacity to
innovate and generate
new ideas
Regional Innovation Clusters
 Latin: To make new or renew
 The value-added commercialization of a new
idea that produces new goods, services, and/or
processes.
 The recombination of existing goods, services
and processes that results in new or renewed
goods, services, and/or processes.
 Because innovation can be widely applied it can
occur in both emerging and traditional
industries
Regional Innovation Clusters
 Presence of spatially proximate organizations
that share active commercial interaction
channels, specialized infrastructure, labor
markets, and services.
 Share a common goal to maximize regional
prosperity
 Link to trans-regional and global networks.
Regional Cluster Policy
 One of the first regions to apply cluster policy in its
economic policy was the Basque country in Spain.
 In deep economic crisis of its steel and ship
building, public and private sector leaders adopted
the cluster approach to change their economic
trajectory.
 A decade later, the region is one of the richest
regions in Spain and has achieved a GDP per
capita level equal to the EU average.
 Many countries employ clusters in their policy. For
example, the Netherlands and Denmark.
Regional Clusters: Evidence
 Regional clusters: groups of closely related and




complementary industries operating within a region.
There is significant evidence for cluster-driven
agglomeration.
Industries participating in a strong cluster register
higher employment and wage growth, number of
establishments, and patenting.
New regional industries emerge where there is a
strong cluster environment.
The presence of strong clusters enhances growth
opportunities in other industries and clusters.
Regional Clusters: Surveys
 Most surveyed clusters are dominated by small or




medium-sized companies.
Most surveyed clusters serve global markets.
R&D and advanced services available within a
particular field in many clusters.
Clusters tend to be young, growing, and among the
national leaders in their fields.
The Global Competitiveness Report provides
comparative data on overall cluster strength for 75
countries.
Thank You!