Discussion paper

DP4441 Economic Integration and Agglomeration in a Middle Product Economy

The Paper examines the interactions between economic integration and population agglomeration in a middle product economy displaying neoclassical growth. There are two vertically-integrated economies. Each consists of a large number of final good competitive firms operating plants in both regions, and a large number of intermediate goods monopolistically competitive firms operating each in only one region. While immobile workers are employed with intermediate goods to produce the final good, mobile workers are used to design the line of differentiated intermediate good inputs. Capital is immobile and the final good is non-traded, whereas the intermediate goods are traded. We find that employment agglomeration and output growth need not be positively related. Furthermore, trade is not necessarily beneficial to regional growth, whereas trade between the two regions need not be associated with a widened skilled-unskilled wage gap.

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Citation

Thisse, J, P Wang and S Peng (2004), ‘DP4441 Economic Integration and Agglomeration in a Middle Product Economy‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 4441. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp4441