The Lifecycle of Regions

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP6757

Authors: David B. Audretsch; Oliver Falck; Maryann P. Feldman; Stephan Heblich

Abstract: Major economic transitions, even when they are disruptive, do not occur instantaneously but rather occur over time, as regions within a country change at different rates. Accordingly, these dynamics may be reflected in a geographic lifecycle with different regions characterized by different phases analogous to the industry lifecycle model. In accordance with this argument, this paper tests the hypothesis that regions can be characterized as evolving over a predictable and well-defined lifecycle: (1) an initial entrepreneurial phases where Jacobs externalities and inter-industry start-ups prevail; (2) a routinized phase where innovation takes place within top-performing incumbents; (3) a second entrepreneurial phase characterized by Marshall-Arrow-Romer externalities, leading to intra-industry start-ups in niches; and (4) a second phase of routinization, in which no further innovation takes place, but is instead a phase of structural change. Using data on 74 West German planning regions, we find compelling evidence of a spatial lifecycle.

Keywords: entrepreneurship; innovation; knowledge externalities; regional development; spatial lifecycle

JEL Codes: O18; O31; R12


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
diverse industry structures (L19)innovation (O35)
large incumbents (L19)innovation (O35)
mar externalities (D62)entrepreneurial activity (L26)
structural changes (L16)entrepreneurship (M13)

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