Evolving Regional Economies
eBook - ePub

Evolving Regional Economies

Resources, Specialization, Globalization

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Evolving Regional Economies

Resources, Specialization, Globalization

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Regional issues are increasingly debated across the social sciences. In an age of globalization, the region has come to matter perhaps more than before. In business, companies orient themselves to engage in regional environments to build capabilities and create critical mass in their vicinity. In the world of policy, almost one-third of the EU budget is spent on regional policy. Yet in spite of this the differences between regions that do well and those that do not are increasing in both Europe and the United States.

In recent years, evolutionary economic geography has done much to create a framework to inform regional policy and academic work. Using its insights, Martin Henning explores why economic growth and transformation is an essentially regionally based and spatially dependent process. The book offers an accessible introduction to the core ideas involved in understanding the dynamics of regional economies and draws on case studies to illuminate these ideas in practice.

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on ā€œCancel Subscriptionā€ - itā€™s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time youā€™ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlegoā€™s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan youā€™ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weā€™ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access Evolving Regional Economies by Martin Henning in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Regional Studies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2022
ISBN
9781788214100
1
Regional economies, but global too
The division between a distinct time perspective and a distinct spatial perspective is something given by tradition, and something which I perceive as a weakness.
T. HƤgerstrand, ā€œTidsgeograļ¬ā€, 134 (authorā€™s translation)
The importance of regional economic change and long-term growth
Regional economic change and long-term regional growth are important processes, because they directly affect the livelihoods of people. How regions cope with economic change, and what the longer-term growth patterns of regions look like, affect peopleā€™s income, their living conditions and probably their decisions to stay in a region or to move out of it. To talk about regional economies is to talk about peopleā€™s welfare. This book explores an evolutionary perspective on the processes of regional economic change and long-term regional growth.
Economic change is a story about how the lives of our recent ancestors gradually improved. Most of us, except a fortunate few, know that only 150 or 200 years ago, our ancestors were poor, living under very sparse material conditions, probably working in or close to the agricultural sector, which demanded hard labour, and with potentially fatal diseases lurking around every corner. At times, our recent ancestors might also have had to emigrate to make a better life for themselves in another country, if conditions and regulations even allowed moving outside their region. In many parts of the world, this is still true.
By an amazing process of economic change and growth, especially following the second industrial revolution in the 1800s, working conditions and living standards have improved greatly, at least in the ā€œindustrializedā€ economies. This process of change and growth has not been purely economic though. It has been intertwined with extraordinary developments in technologies, as well as changes in institutions and social relationships, creating new opportunities for our recent ancestors and, in that way, for many of our generation also.
Better and more efficient markets for goods and services, and for labour too, have been important drivers of this change. However, markets do not work unless they are partially regulated and monitored. Governments have important roles to play here. Regional and national governments need to make sure that some valuable resources that markets are not that good at catering for, such as well-functioning educational systems, exist.
Even though most things have become much better for most people in the longer run, the promising processes of regional economic change have not been without considerable downsides. When regional economic conditions get better on average, there are also those that lose out in processes of change. These could be people that suffer from inadequate working conditions, are being paid wages that are too low or become displaced from their jobs. By means of social security systems, better labour market regulations and stricter ethical codes of conduct, firms and governments have addressed some of these concerns in some countries and regions, but much remains to be done for large parts of the globe. Historically, industrial development and improved market economies have certainly led to a general uplift in living standards, but it has not been an unequivocal success.
In many parts of the world, people are still struggling hard to provide a minimal living standard for themselves and their families. By learning more about how economic change and long-term regional growth works, we will be able to improve conditions for further economic change so that more people can benefit from economic growth.
Today, processes of regional economic change also have to link to how we address the great environmental challenges of our time. It is true that industrialization has drastically improved material and economic well-being for billions of people across the globe. However, it is equally true that this has come at the expense of our natural environment, stretching its resilience to the limit, or even beyond. Future economic change must incorporate a more efficient use of resources and decrease its ecological footprint. It can be debated whether this is achievable within the framework of our current ā€œmarketizedā€ organization of the economy. However, the historical failure to organize alternative regimes so far gives little hope for other ways of tackling the issue than a reformed market economy.
Lots of insightful books and articles already deal with different aspects of economic growth. In this book, we take a closer look at economic growth and change as geographical processes. This geographical view is important, because processes of growth and change differ considerably across regions, and often within the same country. The core aim of this particular book is to show how geography conditions economic change and growth, or rather, how resources, people and firms within a specific geography condition economic change within it. The regional view makes economic change more interesting, because it brings the economic processes close to people and their everyday lives.
Yet, geography is not quite enough to provide a relevant framework for understanding regional economic change. Because we are talking about regional economic change as a process, time needs to come into consideration. In fact, geography and history intertwine inseparably, and history conditions economic change and growth too, or rather, events that take place over time and the legacies they leave behind condition it.
This is not quite the first attempt to synthesize these two core aspects of human life ā€“ space and time ā€“ in economic analysis. Nevertheless, it has proven incredibly difficult to take both time and space into account within one unified framework when analysing and explaining regional growth and change. Building on recent research achievements, this book develops a theoretical perspective on how to combine both time and space in order to understand regional economic change better.
It is important to note that ā€œconditionedā€ by history is very different from ā€œdeterminedā€ by history. This distinction is common among evolutionary scholars and is important. It captures the fact that it is possible to escape the structures of geography and history and the paths of regional economic change that they suggest. However, escaping them often requires no little effort and knowledge to achieve it.
In sum, the perspective throughout this book is ā€œproductionistā€: we are mainly interested in how and where the production of goods and services actually takes place, and how and why it changes over time.
A regional lens on a global economy, where distances matter less and places matter more
In a global economy there are actually plenty of arguments why we should not focus on how geography and history condition economic activities. Video conferences link up the globe, and if you need to transport goods or travel, it is comfortable, safe and relatively cheap. From the late 1990s, at least until the Covid-19 pandemic, the general sentiment was that we are living in an increasingly functionally integrated global economy, as communications become cheaper and both trade and cross-border investments increase (Dicken 2015; Buckley, Enderwick & Cross 2018). Why do we need to consider geography and history in such a globally integrated and fast-changing world?
BOX 1.1 REGIONS
ā€œRegionā€ is a tricky but useful concept and can be defined in many different ways. The economic geographer Gunnar Tƶrnqvist (2000) defined four kinds of regions: natural, cultural, functional and administrative. Common to all of these is that they consider regions as subnational entities (smaller than average countries). Today, economic geographers and regional scientists tend to rely mostly on functional and administrative definitions of regions. Administrative regions are those decided formally by states or authorities on different levels, such as provinces, counties or planning areas. Functional regions are defined by the average linkages between places. These could be commuting patterns, contact structures or market areas for retail. Labour market regions and city regions are currently probably the most used functional varieties. Throughout this book, a ā€œregionā€ will always refer to a functional region.
As one attentive observer has noted, the fact that distance becomes less important does not mean that places ā€“ or rather, what goes on in places ā€“ becomes less important (Economist 2012). There are a couple of reasons why we should hold that to be true. A very superficial look at the matter would lead us to conclude that geography and history make a difference to economic change and growth because:
1.With globalization, geographical distance has become less important but not completely unimportant. Distance still represents a friction or an obstacle that affects many types of economic transactions. Goods need to be transported to reach customers and markets, and people and ideas need to be transported too. So far, there is still a geographical interaction cost associated with this, whether it is a traditional transportation charge or a loss of information. Also, geography is actually not only about physical distance but about the institutions and power relations that influence how different places link to each other too. There are different forms of ā€œproximitiesā€ apart from geographical proximity ā€“ cognitive, organizational, social and institutional ā€“ that relate to geography in different ways and affect the outcomes of economic transactions in space (Boschma 2005).
2.During globalization, economic activities take place in particular localities for a reason, and regions specialize. This means that regions often develop distinct production profiles or even clusters. It is common that regions become widely associated with their economic specialties. Silicon Valley (IT), Hollywood (film and entertainment), the City of London (financial activities), Ingolstadt (automobiles), Nagoya (air and aviation industries) and Bangalore (IT services) are just some of the well-known regional specializations. Apart from these, there are thousands of less famous regional specializations across all economies. There is a reason for that, or actually several. Places are still important.
3.Some regions have a difficult time escaping their economic past. The Ruhr area in Germany, for example, once the industrial heartland of the European continent, has struggled to remain relevant in a time of deindustrialization and a growing service economy. Much the same goes for old industrial regions in the UK, the USA, Scandinavia and eastern Europe. Places, or rather what they contain, seem to matter not only ā€œnowā€ but for the ā€œfutureā€ too.
These examples suggest that we need to consider space and place if we want to understand how the economy unfolds over time and how that affects people. This is true in a globalized economy too. We will call that a regional lens, and we will try to apply it to the analysis of economic growth and change (Bathelt & GlĆ¼ckler 2003).
An important argument in this book is that economic activities and economic change are inevitably linked to a place, but they are linked to other places too. Todayā€™s globalized economy builds on sophisticated regional specialization patterns that have developed over some time. Globalization has been a process of functional integration between regions with specialized production profiles (Dicken 2015). This also means that regional economies have become more dependent on each other. Regional specialization and exchange, underpinned by the use of different regional resources in thousands of places, conditions the nearly endless repertoire of products maintained by the global economy today.
Box 1.2 Globalization
Globalization is used to describe how economies across the globe have become more interdependent for several reasons (Dicken 2015):
ā€¢Faster information sharing between locations with ICT technologies;
ā€¢Cheaper, faster and safer transportation across the globe;
ā€¢Increasing trade and trade liberalization;
ā€¢Linked financial markets;
ā€¢Relocation of some manufacturing from North America and Europe to lower-cost countries;
ā€¢Growth of countries in South East Asia as producer and consumption countries, especially China;
ā€¢The growth of trans-national corporations; and
ā€¢More complex ownership patterns.
On average, the globalization process has coincided with huge improvements in the economic standards of countries. However, it has been noted that to some countries and regions globalization has meant little actual change, and in particular places globalization has even had adverse effects.
A continued increase in global material wealth requires an even more sophisticated pattern of regional specialization. If we were to move towards a less integrated global economy, man...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Contents
  6. Acknowledgements
  7. 1 Regional economies, but global too
  8. 2 Evolutionary economic geography
  9. 3 Time geography
  10. 4 An evolutionary perspective on economic production
  11. 5 Resources in firms and in regions
  12. 6 Creation, use and curation of regional resources
  13. 7 Regional economic change: path dependency and radical transformation
  14. 8 Agglomerations
  15. 9 Evolutionary economic geography and time geography
  16. 10 The secular change: globalization, decreased constraints and the portability of resource use
  17. 11 Conclusions
  18. References
  19. Index