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Working Paper No. 1167

The Economic Microgeography of Diversity and Specialization

Working Paper
Reference
Andersson, Martin, Johan P Larsson and Joakim Wernberg (2017). “The Economic Microgeography of Diversity and Specialization”. IFN Working Paper No. 1167. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Authors
Martin Andersson, Johan P Larsson, Joakim Wernberg

As cities increasingly become centers of economic growth and innovation, there is a need to understand their inner workings and organization in greater detail. We use ge-coded firm-level panel data at the sub-city level to assess the long-standing question whether agglomeration economies derive from specialization (within-industry) or diversity (between-industry).

We show that these two types of externalities co-exist, but differ in their spatial distribution and attenuation within cities. There are robust positive effects of diversity and specialization on firms’ TFP growth at the local within-city neighborhood level, especially for firms in high-tech and knowledge-intensive activities. While specialization effects are bound to the local sub-city level, we demonstrate a positive effect of overall diversity also at the city-wide level.

The results resonate with the idea that urban economies provide a mix of industrial diversity and specialisation. A location in a within-city industry cluster in a diversified, large city appears to let firms enjoy the benefits of local industry-specific externalities, while reaping the general city-wide benefits of a diversified city.