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The New Geographical Turn in Economics: Some Critical Reflections

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The New Geographical Turn in Economics: Some Critical Reflections
Author(s)Martin, Ron
AbstractOver the past few years, a new ‘geographical’ economics has emerged, focused on the spatial agglomeration of industry and the long-run convergence of regional incomes. Several leading names are associated with this ‘geographical turn’, including Paul Krugman, Michael Porter, Robert Barro and W. Brian Arthur. This ‘new economic geography’, it is argued here, is neither that new, nor is it geography. Instead, it is a reworking (or re-invention) – using recent developments in formal (mathematical) mainstream economics – of traditional location theory and regional science. As such it is quite opposed to, and difficult to reconcile with, the work on regional development and industrial agglomeration being carried out in economic geography proper.
IssueNo4
Pages65-91
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceCambridge Journal of Economics
VolumeNo23
PubDateJuly1999
ISBN_ISSN0309-166X
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