The UK government has committed to ‘levelling up’ regional economic performance. Through deriving geographically disaggregated estimates of total factor productivity from plant-level data, we show that the productivity advantage of London is far greater than differences between other regions. Evidence is then provided on the extent to which differences in multinational ownership, trade involvement, enterprise structure, plant age, research and development, subsidization, size, and industrial structure explain the London productivity advantage. Less than half can be explained by these characteristics, which suggests that they should not be the main focus of policy to reduce spatial productivity differentials
The UK’s industrial strategy, with local variants, aims to support manufacturing in ‘traditional ind...
Significant and persistent differences in regional productivity exist across most countries and are ...
The sources of the Scotland–Rest of the UK productivity gap: implications for policy. Regional Studi...
The UK government has committed to ‘levelling up’ regional economic performance. Through deriving ge...
National governments are increasingly focusing on ‘place’ in attempts to tackle economic challenges....
Britain’s industrial strategy, preoccupied with labour productivity, projects London as a role model...
The paper explores the effects of Multinational and Domestic Enterprises (MNEs and DOMES respectivel...
The paper explores the effects of Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) and Domestic Enterprises (DOMEs),...
This paper decomposes aggregate TFP growth in Britain for 1997-2008 to show the contribution of diff...
Recent research demonstrates that the UK is very spatially unequal when it comes to productivity wit...
Second-order cities are generally seen as disadvantaged places in the literature on globalisation, b...
This paper uses NUTS3 sub-regional data for Great Britain to analyse the determinants of spatial var...
Abstract: Papers examining a developed nation’s labour productivity frequently ignore spatial effect...
Labour productivity is known to be higher in the presence of agglomeration economies. This paper pre...
This paper presents new information from plant-level data on the UK’s productivity performance since...
The UK’s industrial strategy, with local variants, aims to support manufacturing in ‘traditional ind...
Significant and persistent differences in regional productivity exist across most countries and are ...
The sources of the Scotland–Rest of the UK productivity gap: implications for policy. Regional Studi...
The UK government has committed to ‘levelling up’ regional economic performance. Through deriving ge...
National governments are increasingly focusing on ‘place’ in attempts to tackle economic challenges....
Britain’s industrial strategy, preoccupied with labour productivity, projects London as a role model...
The paper explores the effects of Multinational and Domestic Enterprises (MNEs and DOMES respectivel...
The paper explores the effects of Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) and Domestic Enterprises (DOMEs),...
This paper decomposes aggregate TFP growth in Britain for 1997-2008 to show the contribution of diff...
Recent research demonstrates that the UK is very spatially unequal when it comes to productivity wit...
Second-order cities are generally seen as disadvantaged places in the literature on globalisation, b...
This paper uses NUTS3 sub-regional data for Great Britain to analyse the determinants of spatial var...
Abstract: Papers examining a developed nation’s labour productivity frequently ignore spatial effect...
Labour productivity is known to be higher in the presence of agglomeration economies. This paper pre...
This paper presents new information from plant-level data on the UK’s productivity performance since...
The UK’s industrial strategy, with local variants, aims to support manufacturing in ‘traditional ind...
Significant and persistent differences in regional productivity exist across most countries and are ...
The sources of the Scotland–Rest of the UK productivity gap: implications for policy. Regional Studi...