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Economic Development Quarterly
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Article

Response to May 2007 Article by Frank Giarratani, Gene Gruver, and Randall Jackson on Industry Agglomeration

Scott Duke Kominers*

Harvard University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kominers{at}fas.harvard.edu.


   Abstract

Abstract of Frank Giarratani, Gene Gruver, and Randall Jackson’s article, "Clusters, Agglomeration, and Economic Development Potential: Empirical Evidence Based on the Advent of Slab Casting by U.S. Steel Minimills."

Ten new steel plants were constructed in the United States from 1989 to 2001, each taking advantage of new steel slab casting technologies that gave scrap-based minimills access to the flat-products market. This market had been served previously exclusively by ore-based integrated mills. Some of the new minimills were built in established steel industry agglomerations. Others were built in greenfield locations with little or no prior steelmaking activity. This research, based on direct observation and plant visits, brings new evidence to bear on the nature and importance of agglomeration economies associated with steel production by analyzing industry clusters related to the advent of slab casting by steel minimills. The authors find that industry clusters can plan an important role in the process of market entry; however, certain product and firm characteristics can shape the nature of industry agglomerations and their effect on firms and regions.

First published on June 12, 2008, doi:10.1177/0891242408318436

Economic Development Quarterly 2008;22:264.

A more recent version of this article appeared on August 1, 2008


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