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The Economic Geography of the Internet Age
Edward E. Leamer University of California at Los Angeles; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Michael Storper University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - Department of Urban Planning August 2001 NBER Working Paper No. W8450 Abstract: This paper combines the perspective of an international economist with that of an economic geographer to reflect on how and to what extent the Internet will affect the location of economic activity. Even after the very substantial transportation and communication improvements during the 20th Century, most exchanges of physical goods continue to take place within geographically-limited 'neighborhoods.' Previous rounds of infrastructure improvement always have had a double effect, permitting dispersion of certain routine activities but also increasing the complexity and time-dependence of productive activity, and thus making agglomeration more important. We argue that the Internet will produce more of the same forces for deagglomeration, but offsetting and possibly stronger tendencies toward agglomeration. Increasingly the economy is dependent on the transmission of complex uncodifiable messages, which require understanding and trust that historically have come from .face-to-face contact. This is not likely to be affected by the Internet, which allows long distance 'conversations' but not 'handshakes.'
JEL Classifications: F15, R11, R12 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: August 26, 2001 ; Last revised: November 20, 2001Suggested CitationContact Information
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