The Periphery in the Knowledge Economy

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Transcription:

REGIONS IN THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY REGIONS ET ECONOMIE DU SAVOIR Mario Polese Richard Shearmur, in collaboration with Pierre-Marcel Desjardins Marc Johnson The Periphery in the Knowledge Economy The Spatial Dynamics of the Canadian Economy and the Future of Non-Metropolitan Regions in Quebec and the Atlantic Provinces Institut national de la recherche scientifique/inrs-urbanisation, Culture et Societe The Canadian Institute for Research on Regional Development

REGIONS IN THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY REGIONS ET ECONOMIE DU SAVOIR Mario Polese Richard Shearmur v in collaboration with Pierre-Marcel Desjardins Marc Johnson The periphery in the Knowledge Economy The Spatial Dynamics of the Canadian Economy and the Future of Non-Metropolitan Regions in Quebec and the Atlantic Provinces Institut national de la recherche scientifique/inrs-urbanisation, Culture et Societe The Canadian Institute for Research on Regional Development

List of Tables List of Figures List of Maps Preface...: Glossary viii ix xii xiii xv EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ^ xix PART 1. PERIPHERAL REGIONS IN THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY: TRENDS AND CHALLENGES 1 CHAPTER 1. Defining Peripheral Regions, Basic Trends, and Why We Should Be Concerned 1 1.1 The Spark: A Paper Mill Closes in the Gaspe 1 1.2 Defining our Universe: Why Speak of "Peripheral" Regions? 4 1.3 Why It Is Difficult to Compare Canada's Peripheral Regions with Regions in Other Nations 8 1.4 Basic Employment and Population Trends for Peripheral Regions 1971-1996 9 1.5 Conclusions 19 CHAPTER 2. A Brief Journey into the Past: On the Origins of Urbanisation and the Geographic Concentration of Economic Activity 23 2.1 The Impact of Rising Productivity on the Composition of Demand and Employment 24 2.2 The Impact of Scale and Agglomeration Economies on Industrial Location 25 2.3 The Impact of Improvements in Transportation and Communications on Market Size and Range 28 2.4 The Development of Urban Hierarchies and Small and Medium-sized Cities i 29 2.5 The Trends in Canada and Scandinavia Are Very Similar 35 2.6 Lessons Learned: The Limited Impact of Public Policy on Fundamental Trends 36 CHAPTER 3. The Impact of the Knowledge-based Economy and New Information and Communications Technologies 39 3.1 The Spatial Impact of the Knowledge-based Economy 40 The Location of University Graduates and Knowledge Workers 40 The Location of Knowledge-intensive Services 44 The Location of High Value Added Manufacturing 53 3.2 The Impact of New Information Technologies (IT) 54 1. IT Does not Reduce the Costs of Transporting People and Goods 55

2. The Net Centralizing Effects of IT Resulting from Increased Competition 56 3. The Producers of IT Hardware and the Providers of IT Content Are in Large Cities 57 4. IT Does not Reduce the Need for Face-to-face Communication 58 The Positive Effects of IT 60 Conclusions 61 CHAPTER 4. Employment De-concentration and the Diversification of Peripheral Economies '...7. 65 4.1 Location Trends for Medium Value Added Manufacturing 65 4.2 Location Trends for Low Value Added Manufacturing 68 4.3 The Slow Road to Industrial Diversification 70 4.4 Tourist Sheds and Long-distance Tourism 72 4.5 Thelmportance of Proximity 75 Conclusions 76 CHAPTER 5. The Coming Crisis: The Impact of New Resource Constraints and the Demographic Transition 87 5.1 The Employment Effects of Constraints on Natural Resource Exploitation 88 Ocean Resource-based Industries 90 Forestry-based Activities 92 Mining and Smelting 94 Other Primary Sector-based Activities 96 5.2 The Population Impact of the Demographic Transition 103 Population Decline 103 Will Out-migration Continue? 104 A Few Words on the Regional Adjustment Model 106 Conclusions 107 PART 2. THE CHALLENGES FACING PERIPHERAL REGIONS IN QUEBEC AND ATLANTIC CANADA 111 CHAPTER 6. Some Regions Are More Peripheral than-others: The Growing Importance of Geography 113 6.1 A Brief Overview of Recent Spatial Shifts in Employment 114 6.2 The Importance of Geography for Central Place Functions 120 6.3 The Importance of Being Located on a Major Transport Axis 123 6.4 The Return of Geography: NAFTA, Deregulation, and Globalization 125 Conclusions 128

CHAPTER 7. Local Entrepreneurship and Location 131 7.1 Entrepreneurship and Innovation 132 7.2 Examples of Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Peripheral Regions 132 7.3 Barriers to Entrepreneurship in Peripheral Areas 133 Distance from Markets 135 Workforce Limitations 137 Other Barriers to Entrepreneurship 139 7.4 The Syndrome of the Intrusive Rentier V 140 7.5 Qualified Workers and Peripheral Locations 142 7.6 Conclusion 143 Entrepreneurship in the Eleven Regions 143 Local Economic Development 145 CHAPTER 8. Successful Regions: What Can We Learn? 149 8.1 Tromso, Norway 149 8.2 Oulu, Finland 151 8.3 Inverness, Scotland 153 8.4 Moncton, New Brunswick 155 8.5 What Can We Learn from These Successful Regions? 157 The Importance of Geography and Agglomeration 158 The Marginal Effect of Policy 158 Path Dependency and History 159 8.6 Conclusion 161 CHAPTER 9. It Matters What Province You're in 163 9.1 Province Matters: A General Perspective 164 Employment Growth 164 Proportion of Working Age Population with a Work Income 165 Work Income per Person with Work Income 166 Percentage of the Population with a University Degree 166 Conclusion of the General Perspective 166 9.2 Detailed Comparison of Gaspesie with Gloucester and Western Newfoundland, and of Lower St. Lawrence with Madawaska 167 Employment Growth 168 Proportion of Working Age Population with a Work Income 177 Work Income per Person with Work Income 178 Percentage of the Population with a University Degree 179 9.3 The Border Effect 180 9.4 Conclusion 182 VI!

CHAPTER 10. The Future of Peripheral Regions in Quebec and Atlantic Canada 185 10.1 Peripheral Regions Will not Die: Towards anew Equilibrium 185 10.2 For Some Regions the Transition Will Be More Difficult than for Others: Identifying the Obstacles 189 Four Obstacles to Regional Economic Development 190 Distance and Transport Costs 191 Urban Centres and Agglomeration Economies 192 The Intrusive Rentier (and the Impact of Seasonal Employment) 197 The Province and Border Effect "...'.. 199 10.3 Synthesis: Rethinking the Priorities of Regional and Local Economic Development 201 Looking beyond Traditional Regional and Local Economic Development Initiatives 202 Facilitating the Transition to the Knowledge-based Economy 204 REFERENCES 211 APPENDIX 1. Employment and Population Statistics, Canada 1971-1996: DataBase and Geographic Classification 215 APPENDIX 2. Definition of 142 Economic Sectors, 18 Sector Aggregation, and Canadian Employment in Each Sector, 1971 to 1996 219 APPENDIX 3. The Research Team 225 APPENDIX 4. End Note: The 2001 Census 229 APPENDIX 5. Listing of Persons Consulted 231 Tables 1.1 Population, as a Percentage of Canadian Total, by City Size and by Central and Peripheral Region, 1971-1996 6 1.2 Various Characteristics of the Eleven Study Regions, 1996 7 3.1 Percentage of Population (15 years and over) with a University Degree, and of Workforce in Scientific and Professional Occupations by Region and City-size Class, 1971 and 1996 41 7.1 Examples of Innovative Activity in Eastern Peripheral Regions 134 7.2 Earned Income by Person with Earned Income (Salary), 1971 to 1996 (Index: Cities over 1 Million = 1.00) 141 8.1 Population in Troms0 and Northern Norway, 1970-2000 150 8.2 Total Employment in Oulu, the Oulu Labour Market and the Rest of Oulu's Province, 1987-1999 (1987 = 100) 152 8.3 The Population of Inverness and its Hinterland, 1991 and 1998 154 8.4 Employment in Moncton and Immediately Surrounding Rural Areas, 1971-1996(1971 = 100) 156 VIII