that in response to changes in technology, costs, and market conditions, capital
constantly shifts from region to region in order to exploit geographical variations
in the opportunities for profitability. In seeking the most profitable locations in
this way, capital in effect ‘plays off’ different regions according to their relative
advantages for accumulation, so that development in certain regions tends to be
at the expense of that in others. Again, in a sense, regions are seen as competing
one against another. Further, this process is viewed as being relentless, denying
the creation of an equilibrium economic landscape, and continually reshaping
the relative advantage of different places as far as capital is concerned. As in the
case of location theory, however, the notion of regional competitiveness is not
itself the focus of analysis.
It is only in the last few years that the subject of ‘place-’ or ‘territorial-compet-
itiveness’ has begun to attract serious attention in its own right (see, for example
Begg 2002; Boschma 2004; Bristow 2005; Camagni 2003; Kitson et al. 2006;
Krugman 2003; Malecki 2004; Porter 2001; Storper 1997;
Urban Studies 1999).
But, somewhat ironically, it has not been geographers but economists – especially
those that have ‘gone geographical’, notably Michael Porter and Paul Krugman
– who have led the new discourse of regional and urban competitiveness and
brought the idea to the attention of policymakers.
According to Porter (2001) a ‘new economics of competition’ is emerging
that is associated with six transitions: from macroeconomic policies to micro-
economic policies that recognise that the ‘drivers’ of prosperity are based at the
sub-national level; from a concern with current productivity to emphasising
innovation, as the basis of sustained productivity growth; from the economy as a
whole as the unit of analysis to a focus on ‘clusters’ (groups of interlinked
specialised activities, often geographically localised); from internal to external
sources of company success, recognising that the location of a company can
affect the capabilities it can draw upon; from separate to integrated economic
and social policy; and from national to regional and local levels as the locus of
analysis and policy intervention. Indeed, in Porter’s view, economic geography
assumes a pivotal role in understanding this ‘new competition’:
The more that one thinks in terms of microeconomics, innovation, clusters and
integrating economic and social policy, the more the city-region emerges as
an important unit. Issues or policies that span nations or are common to
many nations will be increasingly neutralised, and no longer sources of
competitive advantage. However, it is not a matter of one unit of geography
supplanting another . . . The task is to integrate the city-region with other
economic units, and to adopt a more textured view of the sources of pros-
perity and economic policy that encompasses multiple levels of geography.
(ibid.: 141)
As for Krugman, in what is a major departure from his previous dismissal of
‘competitiveness talk’, he now argues that the notion may after all have particular
relevance at the regional level
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