Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10479791 | Journal of Urban Economics | 2005 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
This paper analyses and compares the dynamics of agglomeration in Portuguese and Irish manufacturing industries between 1985 and 1998 implementing Dumais, Ellison, Glaeser's methodology [Geographic Concentration as a Dynamic Process, Review of Economics and Statistics 84 (2) (2002) 193-204]. Using comparable and exhaustive micro-level data sets, we find that industries tend to be subject to strong geographical mobility despite little net aggregate changes in agglomeration in both countries. When the aggregate concentration changes are decomposed into portions attributable to the different stages of the plant life cycle, we discover that births consistently play a deagglomerating role whereas deaths have acted to reinforce agglomeration in both countries. Nevertheless, there are some differences across countries and industries.
Related Topics
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Authors
Salvador Barrios, Luisito Bertinelli, E. Strobl, Antonio-Carlos Teixeira,