even in lobbying efforts to influence Government policies and the allocation of
resources. Regional benchmarking can facilitate the development and ongoing
review of a vision defining the region’s role in a world
economy characterised by
a steadily increasing and ever-shifting division of labour.
But such benchmarking is fraught with dangers and limitations. What precisely
does it mean to compare one city, one region, with another? While it is certainly
instructive to examine and learn from successful regions, policymakers should be
wary about treating them as exemplars that can be easily replicated or imitated
in their own region. Policies rarely travel well: successful
strategies developed in
one region need not transplant easily into other regions (especially in other
countries). Indeed, given that many of the sources of regional competitive
advantage are locally based and embedded, policies necessarily have to respond
to, and take account of, regionally-specific circumstances. Together with the
problems in defining, measuring and explaining regional
competitive advantage
discussed in this chapter, it follows that there is unlikely to be any ‘one size fits
all’ strategy for enhancing regional competitiveness. Different regions will face
different problems, different types of competition, and require somewhat differ-
ent policy mixes and emphases. Economists prefer universal tendencies and trans-
ferable policies: economic geographers have
a comparative advantage in
recognising and demonstrating the difference that place makes.
Whether we like it or not, whether we agree with it or not, competition
is an integral feature of economic, political, social and cultural life. It is not
simply a neoliberal invention. Economic geographers have an important role to
play in elucidating the nature of and limits to the idea of ‘regional
competitive-
ness’, as a way of thinking about the economic landscape, as an empirical process,
and as a form of policy thinking.
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