Economic Geography
Section III Regional competitive
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- 13 Economic geography and the new discourse of regional competitiveness Ron Martin The new discourse of competitiveness
Section III
Regional competitive advantage Industrial change, human capital and public policy 13 Economic geography and the new discourse of regional competitiveness Ron Martin The new discourse of competitiveness Although it may have had some earlier predecessors (see Reinert 1995), the term ‘competitiveness’ is really only a recent one. It entered general economic parlance in the mid 1980s, mainly through the writings of business school gurus, especially Michael Porter. But since then it has become a prominent, even hegemonic, discourse amongst policymakers the world over. Economists and experts every- where have elevated ‘competitiveness’ to the status of a ‘natural law’ of the modern capitalist economy, and assessing a country’s competitiveness and devising policies to enhance it have rapidly become officially institutionalised tasks. What explains this new concern with competitiveness? There is little doubt that the popularity of the notion in policy circles is inextricably linked to the ascendancy and diffusion of pro-globalisation, pro-market neoliberal political ideologies among the advanced nations and many of their leading economic advi- sors. Under this credo, globalisation is not only an ineluctable process, it brings with it expanding trade and increasingly intense competition between firms and between nations (the ‘threat’ from India and China being increasingly invoked in this context), necessitating the pursuit of efficiency, flexibility and technological innovation in order to compete and survive in the global marketplace: A new era of competition has emerged in the last twenty years, especially in connection with the globalization of economic processes. Competition no longer describes a mode of functioning of a particular market configuration (a competitive market) as distinct from oligopolistic and monopolistic markets. To be competitive has ceased to be a means to an end; competitiveness has acquired the status of a universal credo, an ideology. (Group of Lisbon 1995: xii) This new focus on competitiveness is by no means the sole preserve of neoliberal apologists, however; the belief that economic life in today’s globalised and technologically-driven world is distinctly more ‘competitive’ has in fact gained widespread acceptance, even in left-of-centre political circles. The difference is that in the latter, ‘competitiveness’ (like globalisation) is often seen in a negative light, as an ultimately self-defeating imperative, whereas for the neoliberal it is a positive, indeed necessary feature of the free-market order. An intriguing feature of this new discourse of competitiveness is that whilst initially a national-level concern, it has also stimulated considerable interest in regions and cities. One expression of this is a new policy emphasis on the ‘regional foundations’ of national competitiveness. In the United Kingdom for example, the Blair governments have repeatedly stressed the need to raise the competitive- ness of the country’s regions and cities in order to improve the nation’s economic growth and productivity. Similarly, the European Commission sees the improve- ment of regional competitiveness across the Union as vital if it is to secure the goals set down in the Lisbon Agenda (of making the European Union the most dynamic knowledge-based economy by 2010): If the EU is to realise its economic potential, then all regions wherever they are located . . . need to be involved in the growth effort . . . Strengthening regional competitiveness throughout the Union and helping people fulfil their capabilities will boost the growth potential of the EU economy as a whole to the common benefit of all. (European Commission 2004: vii–viii) Likewise, in the United States, research bodies such as the Washington- based Progressive Policy Institute and Harvard’s Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, have highlighted the importance of high-performing regions and cities for the competitiveness of the national economy. This new-found focus on regions and cities reflects a belief, again linked especially with neoliberal thinking, that the pursuit of ‘competitiveness’ requires close attention to the microeconomics of supply, and to the need to remove supply-side rigidities, barriers and related weaknesses in the economy. And this in turn, has promoted greater interest in regions and cities, where, it is believed, many supply-side prob- lems reside and where policies aimed at their removal are best delivered and implemented. At the same time, many regional and city authorities have themselves become increasingly concerned about the relative ‘competitive standing’ of their local economy compared to that of other regions and cities, and with devising strategies to move their area up the ‘competitiveness league table’. Regional ‘benchmarking’, constructing rankings of regions and cities by this or that ‘competitiveness index’, has become a widespread practice. As globalisation has advanced, and nation-states have redrawn and withdrawn their spheres of economic intervention and regulation – or even lost some of their economic sovereignty to the onward march of globalising forces – so regional and city authorities see their local areas as both more exposed to the global economy and with greater autonomy to carve their own future within it. Comparing themselves with other ‘competitor’ regions and cities elsewhere has thus become one way of assessing their performance, their strengths and weaknesses. 160 Ron Martin All this resonates closely with the claim by many geographers (and others besides) that we are witnessing a (re)surgence of regions and cities as the loci of wealth production and economic governance in the world economy (see, for example, Best 2001; Ohmae 1995; Scott 1998, 2001; Storper 1997). How we conceptualise the regional and urban competitiveness is thus highly relevant to this alleged reassertion of regions, and economic geographers should, in principle, be well placed to provide some valuable insight. For the notion of ‘place-’ or ‘territorial-competitiveness’ would seem to be closely linked to what, traditionally, has been a central issue for economic geographers: namely, the pervasive phenom- enon of geographically uneven development. Yet, the idea of regional competitiveness is a contentious one, a notion around which there is no general consensus. Indeed, as Bristow (2005) puts it: Regional competitiveness lacks a clear, unequivocal and agreed meaning within the academic literature. It is perhaps not surprising therefore that the policy discourse around regional competitiveness is somewhat confused. (p. 289) In fact, at the heart of this confusion are several questions. What, precisely, is meant by the term ‘regional competitiveness’? In what sense do regions and cities compete? Are regions and cities meaningful economic units to which the notion of competitiveness can be meaningfully applied? Why should regions and cities differ in competitiveness? What are the policy implications of regional and urban differences in competitiveness? Policy concerns with urban and regional competitiveness have run ahead of answers to these and related questions. A substan- tial research effort would thus seem to be called for to redress this imbalance and provide a firmer base for policy debate. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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