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Why do Industries Coagglomerate? How Marshallian Externalities Differ by Industry and Have Evolved Over Time

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2018-02

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Center for International Development at Harvard University
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Diodato, Dario, Frank Neffke, and Neave O'Clery. “Why do Industries Coagglomerate? How Marshallian Externalities Differ by Industry and Have Evolved Over Time.” CID Research Fellow and Graduate Student Working Paper Series 2018.89, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, February 2018.

Abstract

The fact that firms benefit from close proximity to other firms with which they can exchange inputs, skilled labor or know-how helps explain why many industrial clusters are so successful. Studying the evolution of coagglomeration patterns, we show that which type of agglomeration benefits firms has drastically changed over the course of a century and differs markedly across industries. Whereas, at the beginning of the twentieth century, industries tended to colocate with their value chain partners, in more recent decades the importance of this channels has declined and colocation seems to be driven more by similarities industries' skill requirements. By calculating industry-specific Marshallian agglomeration forces, we are able to show that, nowadays, skill-sharing is the most salient motive in location choices of services, whereas value chain linkages still explain much of the colocation patterns in manufacturing. Moreover, the estimated degrees to which labor and input-output linkages are reflected in an industry's coagglomeration patterns help improve predictions of city-industry employment growth.

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