Montanhas em um mundo plano: porque a proximidade ainda importa para a localização da atividade econômica
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22296/2317-1529.2009v11n2p9Palabras clave:
progresso tecnológico, nova geografia econômica, vantagem competitiva.Resumen
Thomas Friedman (2005) argumenta que a expansão do comércio, a internacionalização das firmas, o crescimento acelerado do processo de outsourcing e a possibilidade de conexão em redes a custos cada vez mais baixos estão criando um “mundo plano”: um campo competitivo de condições homogêneas de concorrência no qual os indivíduos têm maior poder e melhores condições de vida. Este artigo desafia essa visão do mundo, argumentando que embora a globalização traga mudanças, oportunidades e desafios, nem todos os territórios têm a mesma capacidade de maximizar os benefícios e as oportunidades e de minimizaras ameaças circundantes. Numerosas forças estão se fundindo no sentido de provocar a emergência de “montanhas” urbanas, onde a riqueza, a atividade econômica e a capacidade de inovação se aglomeram. Estas forças “tectônicas” incluem fatores como a inovação, os transbordamentos, os encadeamentos para trás e para frente nas cadeias produtivas, a dinâmica de especialização versus diversificação, o capital social e comunitário e, por último, mas não menos importante, o “buzz” da cidade. As interações destas forças na proximidade geográfica das grandes áreas urbanas dão forma a uma geografia muito mais complexa da economia mundial e permitem a ascensão de novos players econômicos. Mas esta geografia, ao contrário de ser plana, é repleta de montanhas, em que as grandes aglomerações urbanas representam os picos mais altos. A maioria da população mundial, ao contrário de ter maior poder, permanece mal preparada para encarar estes desafios.
Descargas
Citas
AMIN, A.; THRIFT, N. Institutional issues for the European regions: From markets and plans to socioeconomics and powers of association. Economy and Society 24:41-66, 1995.
AMIN, A.; THOMAS, D. The negotiated economy: State and civic institutions in Denmark. Economy and Society, 25: 255-81, 1996.
ANDERSSON, R.; QUIGLEY, J. M.; WILHEHNSSON, M. Agglomeration and the spatial distribution of creativity. Papers in Regional Science, 84: 445-464, 2005.
ANSELIN, L.; VARGA, A.; ACS, Z. Local Geographic Spillovers between University Research and High Technology Innovations. Journal of Urban Economics 42: 422-448, 1997.
AUDRETSCH, D. B.; FELDMAN, M. P. Innovative clusters and the industry life cycle. Review of Industrial Organization, 11: 253-273, 1996.
AUDRETSCH, D. B.; FELDMAN, M. P. Knowledge Spillovers and the Geography of Innovation. In: HENDERSON, J. V.; THISSE J.F. (eds.) Handbook of Urban and Regional Economics Amsterdam: Elsevier. V.4, p.2713-39, 2004.
BATHELT, H. Regional competence and economic recovery: Divergent growth paths in Boston’s high technology economy. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development 13: 287314, 2001.
BEUGELSDIJK, S.; DE GROOT,H.; VAN SCHAIK, T.Trust and economic growth, a robustness analysis. Oxford Economic Papers, 56: 118-134, 2004.
BOSCHMA, R. A. Proximity and innovation: a critical assessment. Regional Studies 39: 61-74, 2005.
BOSMAN, M.; DE SCHMIDT, M. The geographical formation of international management centres in Europe. Urban Studies, 30: 967-980, 1993.
BURRONI, L. Allontanarsi crescendo: Politica e sviluppo locale in Veneto e Toscana.Torino: Rosenberg & Sellier, 2001.
CAIRNCROSS, F. The Death of Distance. Cambridge, Ma: Harvard Business School Press, 1997. CANTWELL, J.; IAMMARINO, S. Multinational corporations and European regional systems of innovation. Routledge, London, 2003.
CARLINO, G.; CHATTERJEE, S.; HUNT, R. Knowledge spillovers and the new economy of cities. Working Paper n.01-14, 2001, Mimeo: Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
CASTELLS, M. The Rise of the Network Society. Malden, MA, Blackwell, 1996.
CASTELLS, M. End of Millennium. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1998.
COHEN, W.; LEVINTHAL, D. Absorptive capacity: A new perspective on learning and innovation. Administration Science Quarterly 35: 128-152, 1990.
COOKE, P.; GÓMEZ URANGA, M.; ETXEBERRIA, G. Regional innovation systems: Institutional and organizational dimensions. Research Policy 26: 475-91, 1997.
ANDRÉS RODRÍGUEZ-POSE, RICCARDO CRESCENZI COOKE, P.; MORGAN, K. The associational economy: Firms, regions and innovation. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1998.
CRESCENZI, R.; RODRÍGUEZ-POSE, A.; STORPER, M. The territorial dynamics of innovation: a Europe–United States comparative analysis, Journal of Economic Geography, 7(6): 673-709, 2007.
DE BONDT, R. Spillovers and innovation activities. International Journal of Industrial Organization 15: 1-28, 1996.
DOLLAR, D.; KRAAY, A. Spreading the wealth. Foreign Affairs (January/February): 120-133, 2002.
DOWRICK, S.; AKMAL, M. Explaining Contradictory Trends in Global Income Inequality: A Tale of Two Biases, Faculty of Economics and Commerce. Australian National University, 2001.
DOSI, G. Sources, procedures, and microeconomic effects of innovation. Journal of Economic Literature, 26: 1120-71, 1988.
DURANTON, G.; PUGA, D. From sectoral to functional urban specialisation. Journal of Urban Economics, 57: 343-70, 2000.
DURANTON, G.; PUGA, D. Nursery cities: Urban diversity, process innovation, and the life cycle of products. American Economic Review, 91: 1454-1477, 2001.
ENGELBRECHT, H.-J. International R&D spillovers, human capital and productivity in OECD economies: an empirical investigation. European Economic Review, 41 (8), 1479-1488, 1997.
EASTERLY, W.; LEVINE, R. Africa’s growth tragedy: Politics and ethnic divisions. Quarterly Journal of Economics 112: 1203-50, 1997.
FELDMAN, M.; AUDRETSCH, D. B. Innovation in cities: science-based diversity, specialisation and localised competition. European Economic Review, 43: 409-429, 1999.
FLORIDA, R. The Rise of the Creative Class, and how it’s transforming work, leisure, community and everyday life. New York: Basic Books, 2002.
FRIEDMAN, T. The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2005.
GERTLERT, M. S. Tacit knowledge and the economic geography of context, or the undefinable tacitness of being (there). Journal of Economic Geography 3: 75-99, 2003.
GERTLER, M. S.; WOLFE, D. A.; GARKUT, D. No place like home? The embeddedness of innovation in a regional economy. Review of International Political Economy7:688718, 2000.
GLAESER, E.; KALLAL, H.; SCHEINKMAN, J.; SCHLEIFER, A. Growth in cities. Journal of Political Economy, 100: 1126-52, 1992.
GRABHER, G. The Weakness of strong ties: the lock-in of regional development in the Ruhr area. In: GRABHER, G. (ed.) The Embedded Firm: On the Socioeconomics of Industrial Networks. London/New York: Routledge, 1993. P.227-252.
GRANOVETTER, M. Economic action and social structure: the problem of embeddedness. American Journal of Sociology, 91, 481-510, 1985.
GREGERSEN, B.; JOHNSON B. Learning economies, innovation systems and European integration, Regional Studies 31: 479-490, 1996.
GROSSMAN, G. M.; HELPMAN, E. Endogenous Innovation in the Theory of Growth. Journal of Economic Perspectives 8: 23-44, 1994.
GUISO, L.; SAPIENZA, P.; ZINGALES, L. The role of social capital in financial development. American Economic Review 94:526–56, 2004.
HALL, P. Forces Shaping Urban Europe. Urban Studies, 30, 883-898, 1993.
HEALEY, P. Building institutional capacity through collaborative approaches to urban planning. Environment and Planning A, 30(9): 1531-1546, 1998.
HELD, D.; MCGREW, A.; GOLDBLATT, D.; PERRATON, J. Global Transformations: Politics, Economics and Culture, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999.
HENDERSON, J. V. Marshall’s economies National Bureau of Economic Research. Working Paper 7358, 1999.
HENDERSON, V.; KUNCORO, A.; TURNER, M. Industrial Development in Cities. Journal of Political Economy, 103: 1067-90, 1995.
HENRY, N.; PINCH, S. Spatialising knowledge: Placing the knowledge community of Motor Sport Valley. Geoforum, 31: 191-208, 2000.
HOWELLS, J. Tacit knowledge, innovation and economic geography. Urban Studies 39(5-6), 871-884, 2002.
IAMMARINO, S. An evolutionary Integrated View of Regional Systems of innovation: concepts, measures and historical perspectives. European Planning Studies, 13(4): 497519, 2005.
JAFFE, A.; TRAJTENBERG, M.; HENDERSON, R. Geographic localization of knowledge spillovers as evidenced by patent citations. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 108(3): 577-98, 1993.
JESSOP, B. The Future of the Nation State in Europe: Erosion or Reorganization? WP50, Political Economy of Local Governance Series. Lancaster: Department of Sociology, University of Lancaster, 1995.
JONES, C. On the Evolution of the World Income Distribution. Journal of Economic Perspectives, XI: 19-36, 1997.
KNACK, S.; KEEFER, P . Does social capital have an economic impact? A crosscountry investigation. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 112:1252-88, 1997.
KRISTENSEN, P . H. Industrial districts in West Jutland, Denmark. In PYKE, F.; SENGENBERGER, W. (ed.) Industrial districts and local economic regeneration. Geneva: International Institute for Labour Studies, International Labour Organization, 1992. P.122-73.
KRUGMAN, P .Increasing returns and economic geography. Journal of Political Economy, 99: 484-99, 1991.
LAYARD, R. Happiness: Lessons From a New Science. New York and London: Penguin, 2005.
LEAMER, E. E.; STORPER, S. The Economic Geography of the Internet Age. Journal of International Business Studies, 32 (4): 641-65, 2001.
LUCAS R. On the mechanics of Economic Development. Journal of Monetary Economics, 22(1): 3-42, 1988.
LUNDVALL, B. Å. Innovation policy in the globalising learning economy. In: ARCHIBUGI, D.; LUNDVALL, B. Å. (ed.). The globalising learning economy. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2001.
MILANOVIC, B. Worlds Apart: Measuring International and Global Inequality, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.
MORENO, R.; PACI, R.; USAI, S. Spatial spillovers and innovation activity in European regions. Environment and Planning A, 37: 1793-812, 2005.
MORGAN, K. The learning region: institutions, innovation and regional renewal. Regional Studies, 31: 491-503, 1997.
MORGAN, K. The exaggerated death of geography: learning, proximity and territorial innovation systems. Journal of Economic Geography, 4: 3-21, 2004.
NARIN, F.; HAMILTON, K. S.; OLIVASTRO, D. The Increasing Linkage Between U.S. Technology and Public Science. Research Policy 26, 3: 317-30, 1997.
O’BRIEN, R. Global financial integration: the end of geography. London: Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1992.
OHMAE, K. The Borderless World: Power and Strategy in the Interlinked Economy. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991.
OHMAE, K. The end of the nation state: the rise of regional economies Harper Collins London, 1995. PALUZIE, E. Trade policy and regional inequalities. Papers in Regional Science,80(1): 6785, 2001.
PIORE, M.; SABEL, C. The second industrial divide. New York: Basic Books, 1984. PUGA, D. The rise and fall of regional inequalities. European Economic Review, 43: 30334, 1999.
PUTNAM, R. Making democracy work: Civic traditions in modern Italy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993.
QUAH, D. Empirics for Growth and Distribution: Polarization, Stratification, and Convergence Clubs. Journal of Economic Growth 2: 27-59, 1997.
QUAH, D. The Weightless Economy in Economic Development.WIDER Working Paper 155, 1999.
REBELO, S. T. Long-Run Policy Analysis and Long-Run Growth. Journal of Political Economy, 99(3): 500-21, 1991.
RODRÍGUEZ-POSE A. The dynamics of regional growth in Europe: Social and political factors. Oxford University Press, New York, 1998.
RODRÍGUEZ-POSE A. Innovation prone and innovation averse societies. Economic performance in Europe. Growth and Change, 30, 75-105, 1999.
RODRÍGUEZ-POSE, A.; CRESCENZI, R. R&D, spillovers, innovation systems and the genesis of regional growth in Europe. Regional Studies, 41(forthcoming), 2008.
RODRÍGUEZ-POSE, A.; GILL, N. How does trade affect regional disparities? World Development, 34(7): 1201-22, 2006.
RODRÍGUEZ-POSE, A.; STORPER, M. Better rules or stronger communities? On the social foundations of institutional change and its economic effects. Economic Geography, 82(1): 1-25, 2006.
ROMER P. M. Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth. Journal of Political Economy, 94(5) 1002-37, 1986.
ROMER P. M. The Origins of Endogenous Growth. The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 8(1): 3-22, 1994.
SALA-I-MARTÍN, X. The World Distribution of Income: Falling Poverty and … Convergence, Period. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 121(2): 351-97, 2006.
SASSEN, S. Economic restructuring and the American City, Annual Review of Sociology 16: 465-90, 1990.
SASSEN, S. The Global City. 2. ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001.
SCHERER, F. M. The propensity to patent. International Journal of Industrial Organization, 1(1): 107-28, 1983.
SCHULTZ, T. P. Inequality and the Distribution of Personal Income in the World: How It Is Changing and Why. Journal of Population Economics, 11: 307-44, 1998.
SCOTT, A. J.; AGNEW, J.; SOJA, E. W.; STORPER, M. Global city-regions, p.11-32. In: SCOTT, A. J. (ed.) Global city-regions: trends, theory, policy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.
SEMLINGER, K. Economic development and industrial policy in Baden-Wurttemberg: Small firms in a benevolent environment. European Planning Studies, 1:435-63, 1993.
SONN, J. W.; STORPER, M. The increasing importance of geographical proximity in technological innovation: an analysis of U.S. patent citations, 1975-1997. Environment and Planning A. (Forthcoming), 2008.
STORPER, M.; VENABLES, A. J. Buzz: face-to-face contact and the urban economy. Journal of Economic Geography, 4: 351-70, 2004.
TAYLOR, P. J. Specification of the world city network. Geographical Analysis,33:181-94, 2001.
TAYLOR, P. J.; HOYLER, M. The spatial order of European cities under conditions of contemporary globalization. Tildschrifte voor Economische en Sociale Geografle, 91: 17689, 2000.
TAYLOR, P. J.; HOYLER, M.; WALKER, D. R. F.; SZEGNER, M. J. A New Mapping of the World for the New Millennium, The Geographical Journal, 167(3): 213-22, 2001.
TAYLOR, P. J.; WALKER, D. R. F. World cities: a first multivariate analysis of their service complexes. Urban Studies, 38: 23-47, 2001.
TRIGILIA, C. Sviluppo senza autonomia.Effetti perversi delle politiche nel Mezzogiorno. Bologna: Il Mulino, 1992.
UNDP. United Nations Development Program Human Development Report, New York, NY. United Nations Development Program, (2003) Human Development Report, New York, NY, 2001.
VARGA, A. Local academic knowledge spillovers and the concentration of economic activity, Journal of Regional Science 40: 289-309, 2000.
VELTZ, P . Mondialisation, villes et territoires: l’économie d’Archipel. PUF , 1996.
VELTZ, P . Le nouveau monde industriel. Paris : Gallimard, 2000.
VERSPAGEN, B. Measuring Intersectoral Technology Spillovers: Estimates from the European and US Patent Office Databases. Economic Systems Research, 9(1): 47-65, 1997.
WADE, R. Is globalization reducing poverty and inequality? World Development, 32 (4): 567-89, 2004.
ZAK, P.; KNACK, S. Trust and growth. Economic Journal, 111:295-321, 2001
Descargas
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Licencia
Derechos de autor 2017 Revista Brasileira de Estudos Urbanos e Regionais
Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución 4.0.
Los autores que publican en esta revista aceptan los siguientes términos:
1) Los autores que publican en la RBEUR conservan los derechos sobre su obra y otorgan a la revista el derecho de primera publicación, realizada bajo la Licencia Creative Commons Attribution que permite compartir la obra y asegura el reconocimiento de la autoría y del vehículo de publicación original, la RBEUR.
2) Los autores son libres para publicar y distribuir de forma no exclusiva la versión del trabajo publicado en esta revista (por ejemplo, publicar en repositorio institucional o como capítulo de un libro), reafirmando la autoría y el reconocimiento del vehículo de publicación original, la RBEUR.