The article examines the performance of two competing non-nested models of regional wage variations in Great Britain, one motivated by the Solow-Swann neoclassical growth model which assumes constant returns to scale, the other by new economic geography theory, which assumes internal and external increasing returns. Both models also include controls for labour efficiency variations across regions. The empirical analysis, which is based on the bootstrap J test, shows that the neoclassical model does not reject the new economic geography specification, but the converse is not true and the model with a basis in new economic geography has significantly superior explanatory power. This adds support to the notion that in order to correctly unders...
Theoretical economic geography has received significant new impetus from so-called 'new economic geo...
We set up a two-region model to study the policy challenge of bringing the North’s income up to the ...
In recent years we have seen major advances in economic geography theory, but only limited empirical...
The article examines the performance of two competing non-nested models of regional wage variations ...
This paper uses data for 255 NUTS-2 European regions over the period 1995-2003 to test the relative ...
This paper uses data for 255 NUTS-2 European regions over the period 1995-2003 to test the relative...
This paper uses data for 255 NUTS-2 European regions over the period 1995-2003 to test the relative...
This paper tests two major competing theories explaining the spatial concentration of economic activ...
This paper tests two major competing theories explaining the spatial concentration of economic activ...
Neoclassical theory assumes diminishing returns to capital and spatially constant exogenously-determ...
Regional policy has taken the centre stage in delivering current UK government efforts to promote pr...
This paper shows that both relative wages and industry structure vary considerably across regions of...
This paper tests two competing models, one deriving from new economic geography theory (NEG) emphasi...
Local wage variations in the UK are explained by two non-nested rival hypotheses. The first derives ...
Theoretical economic geography has received significant new impetus from so-called 'new economic geo...
We set up a two-region model to study the policy challenge of bringing the North’s income up to the ...
In recent years we have seen major advances in economic geography theory, but only limited empirical...
The article examines the performance of two competing non-nested models of regional wage variations ...
This paper uses data for 255 NUTS-2 European regions over the period 1995-2003 to test the relative ...
This paper uses data for 255 NUTS-2 European regions over the period 1995-2003 to test the relative...
This paper uses data for 255 NUTS-2 European regions over the period 1995-2003 to test the relative...
This paper tests two major competing theories explaining the spatial concentration of economic activ...
This paper tests two major competing theories explaining the spatial concentration of economic activ...
Neoclassical theory assumes diminishing returns to capital and spatially constant exogenously-determ...
Regional policy has taken the centre stage in delivering current UK government efforts to promote pr...
This paper shows that both relative wages and industry structure vary considerably across regions of...
This paper tests two competing models, one deriving from new economic geography theory (NEG) emphasi...
Local wage variations in the UK are explained by two non-nested rival hypotheses. The first derives ...
Theoretical economic geography has received significant new impetus from so-called 'new economic geo...
We set up a two-region model to study the policy challenge of bringing the North’s income up to the ...
In recent years we have seen major advances in economic geography theory, but only limited empirical...