New economic geography meets Comecon : regional wages and industry location in Central Europe/
Brülhart, Marius
New economic geography meets Comecon : regional wages and industry location in Central Europe/ created by Marius Brülhart and Pamina Koenig - Economics of transition Volume 14, number 2 .
We analyze the internal spatial wage and employment structures of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and Slovakia, using regional data for 1996-2000. A new economic geography model predicts wage gradients and specialization patterns that are smoothly related to regions' relative market access. As an alternative, we formulate a "Comecon hypothesis", according to which wages and sectoral location are not systematically related to market access except for discrete concentrations in capital regions. Our estimations confirm the ongoing relevance of the Comecon hypothesis: compared to pre-2004 EU members, Central European countries' average wages and service employment were still discretely higher in capital regions. Our results point towards an increase in relative wages and employment shares of Central Europe's provincial regions, favoring particularly those that are proximate to the large markets of incumbent EU members.
09670750
Regional wages--Transition economies--Central Europe--Industry location
HC244 ECO
New economic geography meets Comecon : regional wages and industry location in Central Europe/ created by Marius Brülhart and Pamina Koenig - Economics of transition Volume 14, number 2 .
We analyze the internal spatial wage and employment structures of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and Slovakia, using regional data for 1996-2000. A new economic geography model predicts wage gradients and specialization patterns that are smoothly related to regions' relative market access. As an alternative, we formulate a "Comecon hypothesis", according to which wages and sectoral location are not systematically related to market access except for discrete concentrations in capital regions. Our estimations confirm the ongoing relevance of the Comecon hypothesis: compared to pre-2004 EU members, Central European countries' average wages and service employment were still discretely higher in capital regions. Our results point towards an increase in relative wages and employment shares of Central Europe's provincial regions, favoring particularly those that are proximate to the large markets of incumbent EU members.
09670750
Regional wages--Transition economies--Central Europe--Industry location
HC244 ECO