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Working Paper

Urban Specialization in the Internet Age - Empirical Findings for Germany

Kiel Working Papers, 1215

Authors

  • Bade
  • F.-J.
  • Laaser
  • C.-F.
  • Soltwedel
  • R.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

O18 O33 R11

Key Words

agglomeration of economic activities

Spatial Division of Labor

spatial economics

Related Topics

Germany

Digitalization

Labor Market

Declining spatial transaction costs will affect patterns of urban specialization. The underlying hypothesis is that production locations of goods and services which require face-to-face contacts will continue to be concentrated in core cities of large agglomerations even in the Internet age while locations of standardized production activities with a high codified-information-content will spread to more peripheral locations. The paper provides empirical evidence on changes in employment specialization patterns of nine different types of German districts (ranging from core cities of agglomerations to low density rural districts) for the period 1976 to 2002. Obviously there is an increasing concentration of white collarʺ employees relative to blue collarʺ workers in core cities which even gains momentum in particular in the second half of the 1990s.

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