Economic Geography
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Economic and social geography
Conclusion
It has been suggested that even though economic geography must by definition embrace service industries within its research agenda it has largely neglected 120 Peter W. Daniels them as a category worthy of direct attention. Indeed, many of the lasting and significant theoretical and empirical contributions to our understanding of the role performed by services in the economy and development are attributable to scholars in disciplines other than economic geography. For activities whose behaviour is closely linked to factors such as accessibility, proximity, clustering and other geographical concepts this is perhaps surprising or perhaps a missed opportunity. Yet there are a number of milestones in the evolution of service industry studies involving groups of economic geographers or certain individu- als that do represent a response to the general acceptance of the argument that services cannot be ignored. In this regard it is encouraging to note the recent attention devoted to charting future research directions, partly stimulated by the rise of the so-called ‘new economy’ (Beyers 2002b; Daniels 2004; Wood 2002b). One example will suffice. Research on the relationship between developments in information and communications technology (ICT) and the supply, demand, quality and spatial distribution services is far from exhausted, not least as offshoring and outsourcing of both routine and higher-order service tasks presents economic challenges to some developed economies and opportunities for newly emerging economies. In addition, the widespread adoption by business and professional service (BPS) firms of ICT increases the potential for dispersal of the workforce and individualisation of work, including activities such as teleworking. It poten- tially undermines at least one of the rationales for the city. Their role as an intermediate source of knowledge and expertise is critical to sustaining local and regional economic performance; but their distribution is geographically uneven with significant concentration in regional cities with dispersed, low density patterns across city regions as a whole. With ICT increasingly mediating BPS production and distribution, as well as firm–client interaction, there is scope for established intra-urban and intra-regional location patterns of BPS to change over the next 10–20 years. Although the importance of face-to-face interaction and the need for BPS firms to complement underlying industrial specialisation still encourages agglomeration, some types of BPS are already becoming more dispersed, including home-based businesses. There is evidence that single- owner/SME production of BPS is important but the role of property and infra- structure in the ICT–BPS interface (especially for SMEs) and way in which economic and organisational factors interact to drive property and ICT demands in the BPS sector are not adequately understood and require more empirical research. There have been very few occasions since the early 1980s when the annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers has not included at least one special session devoted to research on some aspect of services (the same cannot be said about the equivalent annual meeting of the RGS/IBG in the UK). The constituency has, however, been somewhat narrow and ‘greying’; a relative absence in recent years of ‘new blood’ is a source of some concern as to whether the services dimension of economic geography is sustainable in the medium- to long-term. On services and economic geography 121 |
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