New Economic Geography (International Library of Critical Writings in Economics Series #184)
by J. V. Henderson (Editor)
Table of Contents
Introduction
1 Increasing returns and economic geography 3
2 Equilibrium locations of vertically linked industries 20
3 The rise and fall of regional inequalities 39
4 Agglomeration and trade revisited 71
5 Does geographical agglomeration foster economic growth? : and who gains and loses from it? 98
6 Matching and agglomeration economies in a system of cities 125
7 Political economy of city sizes and formation 149
8 Nursery cities : urban diversity, process innovation, and the life cycle of products 181
9 A theory of urban growth 205
10 On the evolution of hierarchical urban systems 238
11 "Silicon valley" locational clusters : when do increasing returns imply monopoly? 283
12 Zipf's law for cities : an explanation 300
13 Increasing returns, trade and the regional structure of wages 331
14 Market access, economic geography and comparative advantage : an empirical test 352
15 The U.S. structural transformation and regional convergence : a reinterpretation 375
16 Bones, bombs, and break points : the geography of economic activity 408
17 Geographic localization of knowledge spillovers as evidenced by patent citations 431
18 Geographic concentration in U.S. manufacturing industries : a dartboard approach 453
19 Marshall's scale economies 492
20 Geography industrial organization, and agglomeration 520
21 Cities and growth : theory and evidence from France and Japan 539
22 Urban evolution in the USA 571
23 Zipf's law for cities : an empirical examination 601



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