| Publication Type | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2004 |
| Authors | Budd LC, Hirmis AK |
| Journal | Regional Studies |
| Volume | 38 |
| Issue | 9 |
| Pagination | 1015-1028 |
| Date Published | 12/2004 |
| ISBN Number | 1360-0591 |
| Keywords | agglomeration economies; competitive and comparative advantage; competitiveness; regional competitiveness; X-inefficiency |
| URL | http://oro.open.ac.uk/1661/ |
| Refereed Designation | Refereed |
The concept of territorial competitiveness has gained ground in academic, policy and practitioner circles. In particular, urban competitiveness has generated a large literature. However, there is a danger that competitiveness at a territorial level becomes a conceptual chimera. The essential problem is that territorially based actors and agencies seek to position and maintain the utility of their regions and subregions by reference to a set of measures and indicators that are conceptually suspect and often empirically weak. The degree to which regions compete depends on a manifold set of factors. The paper proposes a conceptual framework for regional competitiveness based on combining the competitive advantage of firms and the comparative advantage of a regional economy. The conceptual transmission mechanism to regional competitiveness combines Liebenstein's theory of 'X-inefficiency' and agglomeration economies. The paper begins with a review of competitiveness and its literature. It then investigates the regional balance of payment constraint in the absence of a real regional exchange rate. In conclusion, it asks whether the conceptual approach was appropriate for a study of benchmarking indicators for the London region in comparison with other metropolises.