Multilevel approaches and the firm-agglomeration ambiguity in economic growth studies
Publication date
2012
Authors
Oort, F.G. van
Burger, M.J.
Knoben, J.
Raspe, O.
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
Empirical studies in spatial economics have shown that agglomeration economies may
be a source of the uneven distribution of economic activities and economic growth across cities and
regions. Both localization and urbanization economies are hypothesized to foster agglomeration
and growth, but recent meta-analyses of this burgeoning body of empirical research show that
the results are ambiguous. Recent overviews show that this ambiguity is fueled by measurement
issues and heterogeneity in terms of scale of time and space, aggregation, growth definitions and
the functional form of the models applied. Alternatively, in this paper, we argue that ambiguity
may be due to a lack of research on firm-level performance in agglomerations. This research
is necessary because the theories that underlie agglomeration economies are microeconomic in
nature. Hierarchical or multilevel modeling, which allows micro levels and macro levels to be
modeled simultaneously, is becoming an increasingly common practice in the social sciences. As
illustrated by detailed Dutch data on firm-level productivity, employment growth and firm survival,
we argue that these approaches are also suitable for reducing the ambiguity surrounding the
agglomeration–firm performance relationship and for addressing spatial, sectoral and cross-level
heterogeneity.
Keywords
Agglomeration economies, Micro–macro link, Multilevel analysis, Productivity