Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Regional Economies, But Global Too
- 2 Evolutionary Economic Geography
- 3 Time Geography
- 4 An Evolutionary Perspective on Economic Production
- 5 Resources in Firms and in Regions
- 6 Creation, use and Curation of Regional Resources
- 7 Regional Economic Change: Path Dependency and Radical Transformation
- 8 Agglomerations
- 9 Evolutionary Economic Geography and Time Geography
- 10 The Secular Change: Globalization, Decreased Constraints and the Portability of Resource Use
- 11 Conclusions
- References
- Index
2 - Evolutionary Economic Geography
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Regional Economies, But Global Too
- 2 Evolutionary Economic Geography
- 3 Time Geography
- 4 An Evolutionary Perspective on Economic Production
- 5 Resources in Firms and in Regions
- 6 Creation, use and Curation of Regional Resources
- 7 Regional Economic Change: Path Dependency and Radical Transformation
- 8 Agglomerations
- 9 Evolutionary Economic Geography and Time Geography
- 10 The Secular Change: Globalization, Decreased Constraints and the Portability of Resource Use
- 11 Conclusions
- References
- Index
Summary
In our evolutionary approach to economic geography, we start from the definition of economic geography as dealing with the uneven distribution of economic activity across space. An evolutionary approach specifically focuses on the historical processes that produce these patterns.
R. Boschma & K. Frenken, “The emerging empirics of evolutionary economic geography”, 296
Evolutionary economic geography: how and why regional economies change across time
Some of the main ideas that this book explores are: how regional resources condition the specialization and future direction of change in regional economies (some call them “paths”); and how, with globalization, resources readily imported from other regions fundamentally influence how economic change happens. As we know, the conditioning of economic change on space and time may have positive as well as negative outcomes. The economic histories of regions enable, as much as they restrict, change. History is a mixed blessing.
Evolutionary research into regional economies provides an intellectual backdrop, or theoretical basis, to such ideas. Recent research has uncovered a great deal about how long- term regional economic change and regional growth actually happens (Boschma & Frenken 2006; Boschma & Martin 2010). The evolutionary economic geography approach works in the tradition of the Austro- American economist Joseph Schumpeter, and it recognizes innovation, technological change and the diffusion of technologies as the most important drivers behind economic change and growth. In essence, evolutionary theories work from the basic assumption that firm competition takes place in free markets, and that the economy operates under the normal institutional structures that characterize liberal market economy modes of governance. However, there is plenty to be said about the relationships between the role of government and economic evolution, and we return to this throughout the book. Even if we assume that competition is something that concerns firms in liberal markets, this does not mean that markets can provide all regional resources, nor that markets will work without regulation.
It is important to note that the evolutionary focus is not without complications. There are many competing and complementing approaches to this particular view of economic change, or at least to where it places its emphasis. Yet, much recent regional research has found value in the “neo- Schumpeterian” view.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Evolving Regional EconomiesResources, Specialization, Globalization, pp. 17 - 32Publisher: Agenda PublishingPrint publication year: 2022