articleAmerican Economic ReviewJun 1, 2010Closed access

What Causes Industry Agglomeration? Evidence from Coagglomeration Patterns

National Bureau of Economic Research · Moscow Institute of Thermal Technology · +3 more institutions

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Why do firms cluster near one another? We test Marshall's theories of industrial agglomeration by examining which industries locate near one another, or coagglomerate. We construct pairwise coagglomeration indices for US manufacturing industries from the Economic Census. We then relate coagglomeration levels to the degree to which industry pairs share goods, labor, or ideas. To reduce reverse causality, where collocation drives input-output linkages or hiring patterns, we use data from UK industries and from US areas where the two industries are not collocated. All three of Marshall's theories of agglomeration are supported, with input-output linkages particularly important. (JEL L14, L60, O33, R23, R32)

Citation impact

1,535
total citations
FWCI
278.74
Percentile
100%
References
106
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Economies of agglomeration
  • Economics
  • Construct (python library)
  • Causality (physics)
  • Economic geography
  • Pairwise comparison
  • Manufacturing
  • Cluster (spacecraft)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Decent work and economic growth
No related works found for this paper.