Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
S. Lall, S. Chakravorty (2005)
Industrial Location and Spatial Inequality: Theory and Evidence from IndiaSRPN: Urban Design & Planning (Topic)
M. Amiti, B. Javorcik (2005)
Trade Costs and Location of Foreign Firms in ChinaWorld Bank Policy Research Working Paper Series
Gordon Hanson (1998)
Market Potential, Increasing Returns, and Geographic ConcentrationNBER Working Paper Series
V. Henderson, A. Kuncoro, Matt Turner (1992)
Industrial Development in CitiesJournal of Political Economy, 103
S. Lall, H. Selod, Zmarak Shalizi (2006)
Rural-Urban Migration in Developing Countries: A Survey of Theoretical Predictions and Empirical FindingsLabor: Supply & Demand
K. Head, J. Ries (1996)
Inter-City Competition for Foreign Investment: Static and Dynamic Effects of China's Incentive AreasJournal of Urban Economics, 40
S. Lall, Richard Funderburg, Tito Yepes (2004)
Location, Concentration, and Performance of Economic Activity in BrazilERN: Latin America & the Caribbean (Development) (Topic)
M. Nadiri (1970)
Some Approaches to the Theory and Measurement of Total Factor Productivity: A SurveyJournal of Economic Literature, 8
Teresa García-Milá, T. Mcguire (1993)
Industrial mix as a factor in the growth and variability of states' economiesRegional Science and Urban Economics, 23
H. Herzog (1992)
Who Benefits from State and Local Economic Development PoliciesEconomic Geography, 68
D. Aschauer (1989)
IS PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PRODUCTIVEJournal of Monetary Economics, 23
I. Scott (1982)
Urban and Spatial Development in Mexico
R. Vernon (1966)
International investment and international trade in the product cycleThe International Executive, 8
David Bailey, H. Lenihan, Ajit Singh (2009)
Lessons for African Economies from Irish and East Asian Industrial PolicyJournal of Industry, Competition and Trade, 9
W. Wheaton, H. Shishido (1981)
Urban Concentration, Agglomeration Economies, and the Level of Economic DevelopmentEconomic Development and Cultural Change, 30
M. Amiti, L. Cameron (2003)
Economic Geography and WagesThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 89
Sung Kim (1997)
Productivity of Cities
E. Glaeser, Hédi Kallal, J. Scheinkman, Andrei Shleifer (1991)
Growth in CitiesJournal of Political Economy, 100
S. Lall, C. Timmins (2006)
Regional Subsidies and Industrial Prospects of Lagging RegionsDevelopment Economics
A. Ferreira (2000)
Convergence in Brazil: recent trends and long-run prospectsApplied Economics, 32
K. Conrad, H. Seitz (1992)
The “Public Capital Hypothesis”: The Case of GermanyRecherches économiques de Louvain
D. Puga (1998)
Urbanization patterns: European versus less developed countries.Journal of regional science, 38 2
Dilip Saikia (2009)
Industrial Location in India under Liberalization
S. Pargal, M. Huq, K. Chomitz, Koshy Mathai (1997)
Is there an environmental “ race to the bottom ” ? Evidence on the role of environmental regulation in plant location decisions in India
J. Williamson (1965)
Regional Inequality and the Process of National Development: A Description of the PatternsEconomic Development and Cultural Change, 13
P. Rietveld, J. Boonstra (2002)
ON THE SUPPLY OF NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE: HIGHWAYS AND RAILWAYS IN EUROPEAN REGIONS. IN: TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
E. Jiménez, F. García, Matilde Ivars, J. Villarroya (1995)
Infrastructures and Productivity in the Spanish Regions
R. Nurkse (1953)
Problems of Capital Formation in Underdeveloped Countries
(1992)
The Impact of the Provision of Public Infrastructures on Regional Development in Germany.” Discussion Paper 9313, Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung, Mannheim
V. Henderson, T. Lee, Y. Lee (2001)
Scale externalities in KoreaJournal of Urban Economics, 49
R. Burgess, A. Venables (2004)
Toward a Microeconomics of GrowthEconomics of Innovation eJournal
Paul Bairoch (1990)
Cities and Economic Development
David Dollar, Giuseppe Iarossi, T. Mengistae (2002)
Investment Climate and Economic Performance : Some Firm Level Evidence from India
Shaoming Cheng (2007)
Structure of Firm Location Choices: An Examination of Japanese Greenfield Investment in China*Asian Economic Journal, 21
U. Deichmann, M. Fay, Jun Koo, S. Lall (2002)
Economic structure, productivity, and infrastructure quality in Southern MexicoThe Annals of Regional Science, 38
C. Morrison, A. Schwartz (1996)
Public Infrastructure, Private Input Demand, and Economic Performance in New England ManufacturingJournal of Business & Economic Statistics, 14
(2005)
Coping with an Unfavourably Regulated Monopoly
P. Rosenstein-Rodan (1943)
Problems of Industrialisation of Eastern and South-Eastern EuropeThe Economic Journal, 53
R. Griffith, Michael Devereux, H. Simpson (2006)
Firm Location Decisions, Regional Grants and Agglomeration ExternalitiesUrban Economics & Regional Studies eJournal
(2003)
Market Access, Economic Geography, and Comparative Advantage: An Empirical Assessment.
T. Tabuchi (1986)
Urban agglomeration, capital augmenting technology, and labor market equilibriumJournal of Urban Economics, 20
S. Lall, T. Mengistae (2005)
The Impact of Business Environment and Economic Geography on Plant-Level Productivity: An Analysis of Indian IndustryEconomic Growth
P. Rietveld, J. Boonstra (1995)
On the supply of network infrastructureThe Annals of Regional Science, 29
Kevin Deno (1988)
The Effect of Public Capital on U. S. Manufacturing Activity: 1970 to 1978Southern Economic Journal, 55
S. Lall, Elizabeth Schroeder, E. Schmidt (2009)
Identifying Spatial Efficiency-Equity Tradeoffs in Territorial Development Policies : Evidence from UgandaWorld Bank Policy Research Working Paper Series
J. Anjaria (1971)
Strategy of economic development
M. Nadiri, T. Mamuneas (1991)
The Effects of Public Infrastructure and R&D Capital on the Cost Structure and Performance of U.S. Manufacturing IndustriesNBER Working Paper Series
Michael Murray (1989)
Subsidizing Industrial Location: A Conceptual Framework with Application to Korea
(1997)
Urban Productivity and Factor Growth in the Late 19th Century.
U. Deichmann, K. Kaiser, Somik Lall, Zmarak Shalizi (2005)
Agglomeration, Transport, and Regional Development in IndonesiaWorld Bank Policy Research Working Paper Series
H. Overman, A. Venables (2005)
Cities in the developing worldLSE Research Online Documents on Economics
Towards Microeconomics of Growth
J. Henderson, A. Kuncoro (1996)
The Dynamics of Jabotabek DevelopmentBulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 32
E. Bosker, H. Garretsen (2008)
Economic Geography and Economic Development in Sub-Saharan AfricaERN: Infrastructures; Other Public Investment & Capital Stock (Topic)
U. Deichmann, Forhad Shilpi, Renos Vakis (2009)
Urban Proximity, Agricultural Potential and Rural Non-farm Employment: Evidence from BangladeshWorld Development, 37
(2000)
The Effects of Urban Concentration on Economic Growth
Timothy Besley, R. Burgess (2004)
Can Labor Regulation Hinder Economic Performance? Evidence from IndiaQuarterly Journal of Economics, 119
D. Biehl (1986)
The contribution of infrastructure to regional development : final report
Despite a diminishing role in industrial countries, the manufacturing sector continues to be an engine of economic growth in most developing countries. This article surveys the evidence on the determinants of industry location in developing countries. It also employs micro data for India and Indonesia to illustrate recent spatial dynamics of manufacturing relocation within urban agglomerations. Both theory and empirical evidence suggest that agglomeration benefits, market access, and infrastructure endowments in large cities outweigh the costs of congestion, higher wages, and land prices. Despite this evidence, many countries have tried to encourage industrial firms to locate in secondary cities or other lagging areas. Cross-country evidence suggests that fiscal incentives to do so rarely succeed. They appear to influence business location decisions among comparable locations, but the result may be a negative-sum game between regions and inefficiently low tax rates, which prevent public goods from being funded at sufficiently high levels. Relocation tends to be within and between agglomerations rather than from large cities to smaller cities or lagging regions. Rather than provide subsidies and tax breaks, policymakers should focus on streamlining laws and regulations to make the business environment more attractive.
The World Bank Research Observer – Oxford University Press
Published: May 27, 2008
Keywords: JEL codes O18 R12 R38
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.