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Production externalities and dispersion process in a multi-region economy

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  • Minoru Osawa
  • Jos'e M. Gaspar

Abstract

We consider an economic geography model with two inter-regional proximity structures: one governing goods trade and the other governing production externalities across regions. We investigate how the introduction of the latter affects the timing of endogenous agglomeration and the spatial distribution of workers across regions. As transportation costs decline, the economy undergoes a progressive dispersion process. Mono-centric agglomeration emerges when inter-regional trade and/or production externalities incur high transportation costs, while uniform dispersion occurs when these costs become negligibly small (i.e., when distance dies). In multi-regional geography, the network structure of production externalities can determine the geographical distribution of workers as economic integration increases. If production externalities are governed solely by geographical distance, a mono-centric spatial distribution emerges in the form of suburbanization. However, if geographically distant pairs of regions are connected through tight production linkages, multi-centric spatial distribution can be sustainable.

Suggested Citation

  • Minoru Osawa & Jos'e M. Gaspar, 2020. "Production externalities and dispersion process in a multi-region economy," Papers 2001.05095, arXiv.org, revised May 2021.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2001.05095
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