Profit Cycles, Oligopoly, and Regional Development

Profit Cycles, Oligopoly, and Regional Development
Author :
Publisher : MIT Press (MA)
Total Pages : 357
Release :
ISBN-10 : 026213201X
ISBN-13 : 9780262132015
Rating : 4/5 (1X Downloads)

Book Synopsis Profit Cycles, Oligopoly, and Regional Development by : Ann R. Markusen

Download or read book Profit Cycles, Oligopoly, and Regional Development written by Ann R. Markusen and published by MIT Press (MA). This book was released on 1985-01 with total page 357 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The dramatic shifts in heartland regional economies in the U.S. and other advanced industrial countries have thrown into question the ability of capitalist development to produce permanent growth, economic well being, and balanced regional development. This book develops a theory that radically reconceptualizes the economic forces producing regional change and tests it empirically for a set of fifteen sectors in the U.S. It offers a pioneering approach which should enable planners and managers to better cope with baffling changes in the current economic viability of regions. Traditional theories of regional development have failed to account for innovation and longrun structural change. They have ignored the role of corporate strategy and the existence of market power. Markusen's "profit-cycle theory" provides a key to understanding how, why, and when a region's leading industries undergo major changes. The theory is synthetic, building upon Schumpeterian and Marxist work on innovation and capitalist dynamics, upon the product cycle theories of business economists, and upon theories of oligopolistic behavior. Markusen argues that changing sources of profitability along an industry's evolutionary path will first concentrate and later disperse production geographically, setting in motion a methodically destabilizing process for regional economies. The profit-cycle theory is tested in depth against the steel sector's experience over a century, and against the experiences of sectors in different stages of development, ranging from innovative ones like semiconductors and computers, to mature and troubled sectors like automobiles, textiles, and lumber. The temporal and crosssectional data drawn from the census of manufactures support the theory and its spatial hypotheses. In a final chapter Markusen explores the implications of the research for regional development. Ann Markusen is Assistant Professor, Department of City and Regional Planning, University of California, Berkeley.


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