1 / 12

Rikard Eriksson, Urban Lindgren & Gunnar Malmberg Department of Social and Economic Geography

Labour Market Mobility and Regional Agglomeration A longitudinal analysis of labour mobility in Sweden 1990-2002. Rikard Eriksson, Urban Lindgren & Gunnar Malmberg Department of Social and Economic Geography Umeå University, Sweden. 1. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se.

senta
Télécharger la présentation

Rikard Eriksson, Urban Lindgren & Gunnar Malmberg Department of Social and Economic Geography

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Labour Market Mobility and Regional AgglomerationA longitudinal analysis of labour mobility in Sweden 1990-2002 Rikard Eriksson, Urban Lindgren & Gunnar Malmberg Department of Social and Economic Geography Umeå University, Sweden 1

  2. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se The significance of labour mobility • Essential for regional growth, innovation diffusion and career advancement (BATHELT ET AL 2004; HUDSON 2005; VAN HAM 2001) • Allocates embodied human-capital or tacit knowledge (FELDMAN 2000; GERTLER 2003) 2

  3. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se Examples: • Angel (1991) Environment and Planning A Mobility of semiconductors within Silicon Valley contributed to a rapid internal circulation of knowledge. • Almeida & Kogut (1999) Management Science Innovations where connected to the career-paths of key-individuals in the semiconductor industry in Silicon Valley. • Lawson (1999) Cambridge Journal of Economics Labour mobility between firms enhanced the knowledge creation within the Bio-Tech cluster in Cambridge. • Power & Lundmark (2004) Urban Studies Higher degrees of labour mobility within the prospering ICT-cluster in Stockholm than in the rest of Stockholm LLM. 3

  4. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se Aim To investigate how individual-, firm- and place-specific attributes affect the propensity for individuals to change job both within and between local labour markets in Sweden (1990-2002) 4

  5. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se Data and definitions • Data: Longitudinal micro-data (1990-2002) • Sample: 150 000 individuals each year • Age: 25-65 • Income: ≥ 19 500 € / year • No unemployment benefits • Working in two consecutive years • Regions: 100 Local labour markets (LLM) • Intraregional mobility: • Unique workplace identifier and workplace coordinates t0 ≠ t1 • LLM t0 = LLM t1 • Interregional mobility: • Unique workplace identifier and workplace coordinates t0 ≠ t1 • LLM t0 ≠ LLM t1 5

  6. ( ( Local firms in industry Local firms, all industries ( ( / Total firms in industry Total firms, all industries Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se 1. Localisation economies • External savings from a spatial concentration of similar and related firms (DICKEN & LLOYD 1990; HOOVER 1937) • “Pool of labour” & “A constant market for skills” (MARSHALL 1890) Hypothesis 1: The larger the share of similar and related firms in a region, the higher the probability of intraregional mobility and the smaller the probability of interregional mobility. LOCALISATION EFFECT (log) = MALMBERG, MALMBERG & LUNDEQVIST (2000) 6

  7. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se 2. Urbanisation economies • External savings due to shared costs in large regions (DICKEN & LLOYD 1990; HOOVER 1937) • Enhances efficient job-matching (PECK 1996) • Higher productivity and wages both attract and retain labour within the locality (HANSON 2000) Hypothesis 2: The larger the size of the labour market, the higher the intraregional job mobility and the lower the interregional job mobility. URBANISATION EFFECT (log) =ll l Dummies: METROPOLITAN, REGIONAL CENTRE, OTHER LARGE, OTHER SMALL Total firms (all industries) – localisation economies MALMBERG, MALMBERG & LUNDEQVIST (2000) 7

  8. ( ( Firm employment Local employment, all industries ( ( / National employment in industry National employment, all industries MALMBERG, MALMBERG & LUNDEQVIST (2000) Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se 3. Scale economies • Savings from internal specialisation in large firms (DICKEN & LLOYD 1990; HOOVER 1937) • A large dominating firm compared to both region and nation with only a few similar jobs outside the firm Hypothesis 3: The more dominant the firm is in a branch, the smaller the probability of both intraregional and interregional mobility. SCALE EFFECT (log) = 8

  9. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se The value of immobility • Insider-advantages are accumulated when working at the same place for some time (BECKER 1962; FISCHER ET AL 1998; SIMPSON 1992) • Firm-, place- or branch-specific • Sunk-costs arises in the case of mobility but are less severe for people with a transferable human capital Hypothesis 4: People with a long duration of stay in the same workplace have gained a firm-specific knowledge and are more likely to stay in the same workplace, while people with previous experience of job moves have acquired a more transferable human capital and are more likely to change job DURATION (0-5), MOVES (0-5) 9

  10. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se Empirical model • Random-effects model • Two separate regressions (inter- and intraregional) • Base: All non-movers 10

  11. 11

  12. Rikard.Eriksson@geography.umu.se Concluding remarks • The composition of the regional economy has a significant effect on job mobility • The local circulation of tacit knowledge is enhanced in large urban areas and in smaller specialised regions • The location-specific conceptualisation of insider-knowledge explains the positive effects of localisation economies • Risk: Lock-in effects 12

More Related