increasing returns and competitive advantage. Indeed, this is how self-reinforcing
development is typically initiated, and almost every regional economy – highly
successful as well as less prosperous – displays attributes and examples of lock-in.
What matters is why and under what circumstances lock-in turns from being a
positive process into a negative one, and
why this varies across regions, how some
regions have proved better able to escape negative lock-in and to foster new
paths of development and competitive advantage: in short, why some regional
economies are more adaptive than others.
By viewing regional competitiveness as an evolutionary process, considerable
scope is opened up for the application and extension of key ideas from evolution-
ary economics – such as adaptation and path dependence –
within economic
geography and regional theory more generally.
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