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Industrial Agglomeration and Dispersion in China: Spatial Reformation of the "Workshop of the World"

Asei Ito ()
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Asei Ito: The Institute of Social Science, University of Tokyo, Hongo, Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo, 113-0033, Japan;

China Economic Policy Review (CEPR), 2014, vol. 03, issue 01, 1-29

Abstract: With rising labor costs in China, some scholars assert that China's labor-intensive industries will succumb to latecomer economies, and China's era as the "workshop of the world" will end. There is, however, little agreement regarding whether labor-intensive industries, now concentrated in coastal China, are relocating to other regions. How does agglomeration affect toward this relocation? How does this relocation process affect Asian Production Network (APN)? To approach these issues, this paper examines the determinants of industrial relocation in China by using province- and city-level data from 2004 to 2010, which some scholars call the "post-Lewisian turning point." We particularly focus on the significant gap of economic development in China, especially in regard to industrial agglomeration and dispersion. The results show that the capital–labor ratio is positively related to industrial growth in coastal areas but negatively related in Central regions. Although agglomeration economies have been weak, the absolute scale of local industry includes a positive effect. In sum, both dispersion and agglomeration forces are observed, suggesting the existence of multi-force dynamics of spatial relocation in China.

Keywords: Location of industry; agglomeration and dispersion; China; "domestic flying geese pattern" (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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DOI: 10.1142/S1793969014500010

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