Industrial Clusters in Developing Countries:A Survey of the Literature
Author(s) -
Theresa Thompson Chaudhry
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the lahore journal of economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1811-5446
pISSN - 1811-5438
DOI - 10.35536/lje.2005.v10.i2.a2
Subject(s) - industrial organization , business , cluster (spacecraft) , product (mathematics) , upgrade , production (economics) , scale (ratio) , economics , microeconomics , computer science , programming language , operating system , physics , geometry , quantum mechanics , mathematics
This paper provides a survey of the theoretical and empirical literature relating to industrial clusters. These clusters are groups of firms that are specialized by sector, located in close geographic proximity and consist of mostly small and medium sized enterprises. The benefits to firms from clustering are sometimes referred to as active and passive collective efficiency. Passive collective efficiency refers to benefits accruing to a firm by virtue of being in a cluster, such as access to markets and skilled labor, technological spillovers, flexible specialization, and reduced transaction costs. Active collective efficiency, on the other hand, stems from purposeful cooperation between clustered firms toundertake a large-scale project to upgrade production, such as entering into product marketing.
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