Working Paper

The Rise (and Fall) of Tech Clusters

Sergey Kichko, Wen-Jung Liang, Chao-Cheng Mai, Jacques-Francois Thisse, Ping Wang
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8527

Tech clusters play a growing role in knowledge-based economies by accommodating high-tech firms and providing an environment that fosters location-dependent knowledge spillovers and promote R&D investments by .rms. Yet, not much is known about the economic conditions under which such entities may form in equilibrium without government interventions. This paper develops a spatial equilibrium model with a competitive final sector and a monopolistically competitive intermediate sector, which allows us to determine necessary and sufficient conditions for a tech cluster to emerge as an equilibrium outcome. We show that strongly localized knowledge spillovers, skilled labor abundance, and low commuting costs are key drivers for a tech cluster to form. Not only is the productivity of the final sector higher when intermediate firms cluster, but a tech cluster hosts more intermediate firms and more R&D and production activities, and yields greater worker welfare, compared to what a dispersed pattern would generate. With continual improvements in infrastructure and communication technology that lowers coordination costs, tech clusters will eventually be fragmented.

CESifo Category
Industrial Organisation
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Keywords: high-tech city, knowledge spillovers, intermediate firm clustering, land use, commuting, R&D
JEL Classification: D510, L220, O330, R130