| Title: | Competitors, Complementors, Parents and Place: Explaining Regional Agglomeration in the U.S. Auto Industry | 
| Authors: | Cabral, Luis Wang, Zhu Xu, Daniel Yi | 
| Keywords: | local externalities; employee spinouts; industry agglomeration | 
| Issue Date: | 10-Apr-2013 | 
| Abstract: | Taking the early U.S. automobile industry as an example, we evaluate four competing hypotheses on regional industry agglomeration: intra-industry local externalities, inter-industry local externalities, employee spinouts, and location fixed-effects. Our findings suggest that inter-industry spillovers, particularly the development of the carriage and wagon industry, play an important role. Spinouts play a secondary role and only contribute to agglomeration at later stages of industry evolution. The presence of other firms in the same industry has a negligible (or maybe even negative) effect on agglomeration. Finally, location fixed-effects account for some agglomeration, though to a lesser extent than inter-industry spillovers and spinouts. | 
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2451/31760 | 
| Rights: | Copyright Cabral, Wang, and Xu, April 2013. | 
| Appears in Collections: | Economics Working Papers | 
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cabral_ExplainingRegionalAgglomeration_Apr2013.pdf | Explaining Regional Agglomeration in the U.S. Auto Industry | 394.45 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open | 
Items in FDA are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
