Discussion paper

DP3542 Regional Specialization and Transport Costs

We consider an economic geography model in which all firms and workers are mobile, but the agglomeration of firms and workers within a region generates urban costs. We show that industries with high transport costs tend to be more agglomerated than industries with low transport costs. This is to be contrasted to the result obtained in the one-industry case in which agglomeration arises for low transport costs. We also show that firms supplying non-tradable consumer services are more agglomerated than firms belonging to light industries. In this case, the equilibrium involves an urban hierarchy: for each good, a larger array of varieties is produced within the same city.

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Citation

Thisse, J and T Tabuchi (2002), ‘DP3542 Regional Specialization and Transport Costs‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 3542. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp3542