The Principle of Relatedness

Publication date

2018

Authors

Hidalgo, César A.
Balland, Pierre-AlexandreISNI 0000000358952752
Boschma, RonISNI 0000000116353431
Delgado, Mercedes
Feldman, Maryann
Frenken, K.ORCID 0000-0003-4731-0201ISNI 0000000114504056
Glaeser, Edward
He, Canfei
Kogler, Dieter F.
Morrison, AndreaORCID 0000-0002-1878-6780ISNI 0000000363259506

Editors

Morales, Alfredo J.
Gershenson, Carlos
Braha, Dan
Minai, Ali A.
Bar-Yam, Yaneer

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
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License

Abstract

The idea that skills, technology, and knowledge, are spatially concentrated, has a long academic tradition. Yet, only recently this hypothesis has been empirically formalized and corroborated at multiple spatial scales, for different economic activities, and for a diversity of institutional regimes. The new synthesis is an empirical principle describing the probability that a region enters---or exits---an economic activity as a function of the number of related activities present in that location. In this paper we summarize some of the recent empirical evidence that has generalized the principle of relatedness to a fact describing the entry and exit of products, industries, occupations, and technologies, at the national, regional, and metropolitan scales. We conclude by describing some of the policy implications and future avenues of research implied by this robust empirical principle.

Keywords

Economic complexity, Relatedness, Economic geography, Taverne

Citation

Hidalgo, C A, Balland, P-A, Boschma, R, Delgado, M, Feldman, M, Frenken, K, Glaeser, E, He, C, Kogler, D F, Morrison, A, Neffke, F, Rigby, D, Stern, S, Zheng, S & Zhu, S 2018, The Principle of Relatedness. in A J Morales, C Gershenson, D Braha, A A Minai & Y Bar-Yam (eds), Unifying Themes in Complex Systems IX. Springer, Cham, pp. 451-457. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96661-8_46