Agents of Structural Change: The Role of Firms and Entrepreneurs in Regional Diversification

Publication date

2018-01-01

Authors

Neffke, Frank
Hartog, MattéISNI 0000000368814230
Boschma, RonISNI 0000000116353431
Henning, Martin

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Who introduces structural change in regional economies: Entrepreneurs or existing firms? And do local or nonlocal establishment founders create most novelty in a region? We develop a theoretical framework that focuses on the roles different agents play in regional transformation. We then apply this framework, using Swedish matched employer–employee data, to determine how novel the activities of new establishments are to a region. Incumbents mainly reinforce a region’s current specialization: incumbent’s growth, decline, and industry switching further align them with the rest of the local economy. The unrelated diversification required for structural change mostly originates via new establishments, especially via those with nonlocal roots. Interestingly, although entrepreneurs often introduce novel activities to a local economy, when they do so, their ventures have higher failure rates compared to new subsidiaries of existing firms. Consequently, new subsidiaries manage to create longer-lasting change in regions.

Keywords

capability base, diversification, entrepreneurship, regions, relatedness, resource-based view, structural change, Taverne, Geography, Planning and Development, Economics and Econometrics

Citation

Neffke, F, Hartog, M, Boschma, R & Henning, M 2018, 'Agents of Structural Change : The Role of Firms and Entrepreneurs in Regional Diversification', Economic Geography, vol. 94, no. 1, pp. 23-48. https://doi.org/10.1080/00130095.2017.1391691