The Effects of Clusters on the Survival and Performance of New Firms

44 Pages Posted: 3 May 2011 Last revised: 2 Jul 2013

See all articles by Karl Wennberg

Karl Wennberg

Linkoping University - Institute for Analytical Sociology (IAS)

Göran Lindqvist

Stockholm School of Economics

Date Written: December 22, 2008

Abstract

This paper contributes to the literatures on entrepreneurship and economic geography by investigating the effects of clusters on the survival and performance of new entrepreneurial firms. Defining clusters as regional agglomerations of related industries, we analyse firm-level data from 1993 to 2002 for all 4,397 Swedish firms started in the telecom and consumer electronics, financial services, information technology, medical equipment, and pharmaceuticals and pharmaceutical sectors. We find that that firms located in strong clusters create more jobs, higher tax payments, and higher wages to employees. These effects are consistent for absolute agglomeration measures (firm or employee counts), but weaker for relative agglomeration measures (location quotients). The strengths of the effects are found to vary depending on which geographical aggregation level is chosen for the agglomeration measure.

Keywords: Clusters, Agglomeration, Entrepreneurship, Survival, Job Creation

JEL Classification: R12, L26, O12

Suggested Citation

Wennberg, Karl and Lindqvist, Göran, The Effects of Clusters on the Survival and Performance of New Firms (December 22, 2008). Small Business Economics, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1319305

Karl Wennberg (Contact Author)

Linkoping University - Institute for Analytical Sociology (IAS) ( email )

Norrköping, 601 74
Sweden

Göran Lindqvist

Stockholm School of Economics ( email )

PO Box 6501
Stockholm, 11383
Sweden

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
182
Abstract Views
1,546
Rank
301,572
PlumX Metrics