local firms. Also, as noted above, regional authorities and bodies are becoming
increasingly active in other areas of local economic governance, whether as the
delivery agents of decentralised national government policies, or as active policy
agents in their own right and capacity. It may be that regions are difficult to
define as ‘essential’ economic units, but the fact is that a process of ‘regional
institutionalisation’ of policy intervention and responsibility appears to be under-
way that is endowing politically and administratively defined regions with some
degree of functional economic meaning. It is as part of this institutionalisation
process that regional authorities and bodies are busy devising policies to improve
and upgrade the competitiveness and productivity of the businesses, workers and
organisations in their jurisdictions. If only because of this rise of the region as an
arena of economic governance and intervention, and the increasing trend for
policymakers to think of regions as the sites of competitive advantage, it is impor-
tant to appraise the different senses in which the term ‘regional competitiveness’
is used.
There are in fact two interrelated questions that research needs to address:
does thinking in terms of competitiveness throw light on how we define and
analyse regional economies? And does a regional (geographical) perspective help
us to understand competitiveness? Both questions are worthy of serious attention
by economic geographers, and both have direct policy implications.
Dostları ilə paylaş: