- A-Z
- Jena Economics Rese...
- Volume 1
- Industry Specializa...
- Author
- published
- Tue Jun 5 2007
- Number of discussion paper
-
2007-018
- keyword(s)
-
agglomeration concentration
diversity
Innovation
patents
regional analysis
specialization
technical efficiency
- abstract
-
Innovation processes are characterized by a pronounced division of labor between actors. Two types of externality may arise from such interactions. On the one hand, a close location of actors affiliated to the same industry may stimulate innovation (MAR externalities). On the other hand, new ideas may be born by the exchange of heterogeneous and complementary knowledge between actors, which belong to different industries (Jacobs’ externalities). We test the impact of both MAR as well as Jacobs’ externalities on innovative performance at the regional level. The results suggest an inverted u-shaped relationship between regional specialization in certain industries and innovative performance. Further key determinants of the regional innovative performance are private sector R&D and university-industry collaboration.
- article pub. typess JER
- Research article
- article languages JER
- Englisch
- article research fields JER
- entrepreneurship
- JEL-Classification for JER
- O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and Incentives ; O18 - Regional, Urban, and Rural Analyses ; R12 - Size and Spatial Distributions of Regional Economic Activity
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:urmel-3981084b-8042-4771-937d-826b6fa2a6698-00026910-17