TY - JOUR
T1 - Industrial configuration in an economy with low transportation costs
AU - Takatsuka, Hajime
AU - Zeng, Dao Zhi
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Tomoya Mori, Takatoshi Tabuchi, three anonymous reviewers, Editor Janet Kohlhase, and the seminar participants at University of Tokyo, Tohoku University, and Chuo University for helpful suggestions. Financial support from Japan Society for the Promotion of Science through Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research 24530303, 22330073, 20730183 for the first author, and 24243036, 24330072, 22330073, 21243021, and the Y.C. Tang disciplinary development fund of Zhejiang University for the second author are acknowledged.
PY - 2013/10
Y1 - 2013/10
N2 - We examine how the spatial economy with multiple industries is shaped when interregional trade costs and intraregional commuting costs are low. All industries are characterized by increasing returns to scale and monopolistic competition, and they are differentiated by their trade costs and the degree of intra-industry competition measured by their firm numbers. We find some distinct rules in industrial location. First, at most, one industry disperses, while others agglomerate in a region according to their ratios of relative trade costs to firm numbers. Second, industries with stronger competition constitute a smaller region, while those with higher trade costs compose a larger region. The results are consistent with the classical Weberian location theory and suggest that the degree of intra-industry competition also becomes an essential factor to determine industrial location when transportation costs are small. Finally, the population differential between the regions monotonically decreases in the relative commuting cost.
AB - We examine how the spatial economy with multiple industries is shaped when interregional trade costs and intraregional commuting costs are low. All industries are characterized by increasing returns to scale and monopolistic competition, and they are differentiated by their trade costs and the degree of intra-industry competition measured by their firm numbers. We find some distinct rules in industrial location. First, at most, one industry disperses, while others agglomerate in a region according to their ratios of relative trade costs to firm numbers. Second, industries with stronger competition constitute a smaller region, while those with higher trade costs compose a larger region. The results are consistent with the classical Weberian location theory and suggest that the degree of intra-industry competition also becomes an essential factor to determine industrial location when transportation costs are small. Finally, the population differential between the regions monotonically decreases in the relative commuting cost.
KW - F12
KW - R12
KW - R30
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U2 - 10.1007/s00168-013-0553-5
DO - 10.1007/s00168-013-0553-5
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84881615014
SN - 0570-1864
VL - 51
SP - 593
EP - 620
JO - Annals of Regional Science
JF - Annals of Regional Science
IS - 2
ER -