Firm heterogeneity, productivity and spatialle bounded externalities.
Publication date
2011
Authors
Raspe, O.
Oort, F.G. van
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2011
Abstract
In this paper, we argue that conceptually disentangling the ‘context versus composition’ aspects of
regional growth is a multilevel issue. By applying multilevel models (also called random-effects models),
we show (1) the importance of considering firm-specific characteristics simultaneously with regionspecific
characteristics, as we find that a large part of what is traditionally assigned to the impact of the
region should be assigned to firm-specific characteristics and (2) that existing single-level methodologies
can be problematic, as they are vulnerable to the charge of estimating significance levels that are too
liberally assigned and promote exaggerations. This is illustrated empirically by showing that single-level
approaches would lead to the conclusion that innovation spillovers are highly significant in a setting of
Dutch urban growth differentials, while multilevel analyses shows less liberally assigned significance
levels. We conclude that multilevel-effect models better fit research questions that combine firm and
spatial characteristics simultaneously, especially because they allow firm-specific characteristics to be
differently linked to their regional contexts.
Keywords
Firm growth, Knowledge externalities, Multilevel analysis, Ecological fallacy