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III.???? (Location theory)

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Title: III.???? (Location theory)


1
III.????(Location theory)
  • 1.Firm location and urban system
  • 2.Relations between firms and industries

2
1. firm location urban system
  • ?????
  • ?????
  • ?????
  • ?????

3
1)????????
  • Thunen,1826,
  • ??????????????
  • ?????????????(???????????),????????????
  • Optimal agricultural land uses based on transport
    costs to market

4
??
  • ????
  • 1.?????????????
  • 2.??????????
  • 3.??????,?????????
  • 4.???50???????,???????
  • 5.??????????????,?????????????
  • 6.????????????
  • ??????
  • R(P-C-Kt)Q
  • P???????C???Q??K???(??)???t???
  • ????(??????????)

5
????????????,???????????????????????
  • ????????
  • ?????
  • ?????(???)
  • ???????????
  • ??????(?????????)
  • ?????(???51-80???,????,????)

6
?????
  • ??????????????
  • ????(Sinclair,1967)
  • ?????,????????????????????,????
  • William Alonso (1933-1999)
  • Optimal distances of residential and commercial
    land uses from CBD

7
2)????????Alfred Weber, 1909 ???????????
  • ??????,????????
  • ?????????????????
  • ???????????????????
  • ?????????????????

8
?????????????????
9
????????(Varignnon Frame)
10
3)Hoover?????1948???????
  • ???????????????(????,??,??,?????????)???????(????
    ,??,??????,????,????????)?
  • ?????????,?????????????????????????
  • ?????????????????,??????????????????,??????????
  • ??????,????????????????????????????
  • An Introduction to Regional EconomicsEdgar M.
    Hoover and Frank Giarratani
  • http//www.rri.wvu.edu/WebBook/Giarratani/cont
    ents.htm

11
????????
  • ?????????????,?????????????????????????????????,
    ?????????????????,??????????????????,????????
  • (?????/just-in-time/????)
  • ?????????(????????),??????????????

12

4)????????Losch, 1940, ??????
  • market-oriented?????????????--???
  • ?????????,????????????
  • --????????????,?????????????????????,????????

13
5)?????(central place theory) ????? Christaller
, 1933
  • ????????????--???,???,???????,????????????????????
    ????
  • ??????(????)
  • ???

14
2. relations between firms industries
??????????
15
1)?????(spatial competition for market
share)????????
  • ?????(Hotelling model) Hotelling, 1929,
    Stability in competition, Economic Journal,
    341-57.
  • two ice cream vendors on the beach to share
    market attendance for spatial concentration

16
Hotelling Modellocations of venders on the beach
17
2)??(agglomeration)
  • ????????(agglomeration economies) ?????(Hoover,
    1937)
  • I.????(scale economies)
  • II.?????(localization economies)
  • III. ?????(urbanization economies)

18
  • I.????(scale economies)
  • ???????????????????????????????????????????????,
    ??????????????????????????.
  • II. ?????(localization economies)????????????????
    ????????????????????????????????,?????????????????
    ?????????share labor pool, suppliers, etc.
  • III.????? (urbanization economies)
  • ???????????????????????????
  • a) ????????(e.g. subway), ????
  • b) ???versatility, e.g. New York, fashion
    industry

19
???????????(external scale economies)
  • Marshall (1890 1961) defines external scale
    economies as cost savings accruing to the firm
    because of size or growth of output in industry
    generally. Such economies contrast directly with
    internal scale economies, which are the source of
    increasing returns from growth in the size of
    plant. Such external economies are essentially
    spatial externalities, which may be defined
    generally as economic side-effects of proximity
    between economic actors. They can be either
    negative or positive, static or dynamic,
    pecuniary or technological. The static variety
    are reversible, whereas dynamic externalities are
    those associated with the technological advances,
    increased specialization, and division of labor
    that accompanies and/or drives growth and
    development (Young 1928).

20
external scale economies??? (Marshall, 1890
1961)
  • a. (???)???? ??????????,???????,??/????
  • b.????? land cost, congestion, etc.
  • ?change cost patterns (e.g. labor cost rises)
  • ? increase productivity or decline

21
????
  • Vernon (1960) the case of New York
  • a. versatility
  • b. skillful labor
  • c. small firms specialized
  • d. face to face contact
  • e. ???????? (E.g. Specific machine)
  • f. ???(suppliers)
  • --backward/forward linkages

22
 3)linkage studies
  • 50-60s, mapping the relations between sectors and
    economies
  • linkages the contacts and flows of information
    and/or materials between two or more individuals.
  • --indicate the interdependence among firms and
    its effects on location

23
linkages
  • forward linkages market-orientedproducer and
    customers
  • backward linkages producers and suppliers (of
    goods and services)
  • sideways interaction with other firms involved
    in the same process

24
sectoral relations
  • input-output models, Wassily Leontief
    transaction table
  • The production (or output) of one sector become
    the inputs for other sectors
  • Input-output analysis(IO)
  • (http//faculty.washington.edu/krumme/207/inputout
    put.html)

25
Input-output table for Mexico, 1980(rowssales/
columnspurchases)
 
26
?linkage studies???
  • which linkages matter?
  • Goods/markets/services/ information/technology

27
4)????(path dependency) ???????
  • ? QWERTY?????????,??????????(lock in)?

28
Krugman (1991, p. 60) cites the carpet industry
in Dalton, Georgia.
  • . . .in 1895 the teenaged Miss Evans made a
    bedspread as a gift. The recipients and their
    neighbors were delighted with the gift, and over
    the next few years Miss Evans made a number of
    tufted items, discovering in 1900 a trick of
    locking the tufts into the backing. She now began
    to sell the bedspreads, and she and her friends
    and neighbors launched a local handicraft
    industry that began selling items well beyond the
    immediate vicinity.

29
Path Dependency
  • There was no carpet technology institute at the
    local university, no cluster of carpet producers
    in the region, and no history of carpet making
    among local workers. Yet Dalton became a leader
    in carpet production (indeed, a carpet industry
    cluster), scale economies and externalities
    reinforced its lead, and the rest is history.
    Because technology can be path dependent,
    regional development trajectories can become path
    dependent.

30
Reference
  • An Introduction to Regional EconomicsEdgar M.
    Hoover and Frank Giarratani
  • http//www.rri.wvu.edu/WebBook/Giarratani/cont
    ents.htm
  • ???,p.50-53
  • ???,1999, ?????,?????, ???????
  • Krugman, Geography and Trade
  • Leon Moses, "Location and the Theory of
    Production," Quarterly Journal of Economics,
    vol.72, 1958, pp.259-72.
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