From its inception in the late 1940s, Irish industrial policy has attempted to disperse industrial plants across regions, thereby avoiding the problem of rural-urban migration experienced by many developing countries. Analysing a large sample of companies which established in Ireland in the early 1980s, we examine whether the survival rates of companies and jobs are lower in peripheral compared with core regions, and whether indigenous and foreign companies differ in this regard. We find higher (lower) company and job survival rates for indigenous (foreign) companies at the core than at the periphery.
The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of agglomeration economies on the productivity o...
Studies by Porter (1990) and others find that competitive and successful industries usually occur in...
Since the regional policy nowadays is an important subject in the European institutions, the involve...
As job losses increased rapidly in 2003 amid calls for increased competitiveness, it becomes all th...
peer-reviewedWith high profile Multinational Enterprise (MNE) job losses being a regular news featu...
Manufacturing industry is a crucial ingredient in national economic development. This is because of...
Manufacturing industry is a crucial ingredient in national economic development. This is because of...
We study the regional location of multidimensionals in Ireland since the 1970s by focusing on the ro...
We study the regional location of multinationals in Ireland since the 1970s by focusing on the role ...
Manufacturing investment from abroad has been of immense importance to Ireland’s economic developme...
In a country with a small domestic market such as Ireland’s, the development of exports is the key ...
While growth in output and employment remains relatively strong in the Irish economy, there has been...
l!:cland - both North and South - is commonly perceived and portrayed as constitutip,g a peripheral...
From the 1960s until the mid-1980s, most of the growth of employment, output and exports in manufact...
Ruane and Gorg (1996: 37) remarked that \u27any careful comparison of the Irish economy with other e...
The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of agglomeration economies on the productivity o...
Studies by Porter (1990) and others find that competitive and successful industries usually occur in...
Since the regional policy nowadays is an important subject in the European institutions, the involve...
As job losses increased rapidly in 2003 amid calls for increased competitiveness, it becomes all th...
peer-reviewedWith high profile Multinational Enterprise (MNE) job losses being a regular news featu...
Manufacturing industry is a crucial ingredient in national economic development. This is because of...
Manufacturing industry is a crucial ingredient in national economic development. This is because of...
We study the regional location of multidimensionals in Ireland since the 1970s by focusing on the ro...
We study the regional location of multinationals in Ireland since the 1970s by focusing on the role ...
Manufacturing investment from abroad has been of immense importance to Ireland’s economic developme...
In a country with a small domestic market such as Ireland’s, the development of exports is the key ...
While growth in output and employment remains relatively strong in the Irish economy, there has been...
l!:cland - both North and South - is commonly perceived and portrayed as constitutip,g a peripheral...
From the 1960s until the mid-1980s, most of the growth of employment, output and exports in manufact...
Ruane and Gorg (1996: 37) remarked that \u27any careful comparison of the Irish economy with other e...
The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of agglomeration economies on the productivity o...
Studies by Porter (1990) and others find that competitive and successful industries usually occur in...
Since the regional policy nowadays is an important subject in the European institutions, the involve...