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Journal Article

Citation

de Bok M, van Oort F. J. Transp. Land Use 2011; 4(1): 5-24.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, The author(s), Publisher University of Minnesota, Center for Transportation Studies)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

A growing body of empirical urban economic studies suggests that agglomeration and accessibility externalities are important sources of the uneven distribution of economic activities across cities and regions. At the same time, little is known about the importance of agglomeration economies for the actual location behavior of firms. This is remarkable, since theories that underlie agglomeration economies are microeconomic in nature. In a case study of the Dutch province of South Holland, the authors analyze micro-level data to determine the extent to which relocation decisions are dependent on accessibility and agglomeration externalities when controlling for firm characteristics. These externalities are measured with location attributes for both own-sector localization and urbanization economies and for proximity to transport infrastructures. The results confirm that firm relocation behavior is affected much more by firm-level attributes (size, age, and growth rate) than by agglomeration and accessibility attributes. Still, accessibility and agglomeration are significantly attached to firm relocations, though their effects vary over sectors. Own-sector and generalized external economies are more important for a firm's location choices than proximity to transport infrastructure.

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