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Regional Externalities [electronic resource] /edited by Wim Heijman.

by Heijman, Wim [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007.Description: XIII, 341 p. 74 illus. online resource.ISBN: 9783540354840.Subject(s): Economics | Geography | Regional planning | Economics/Management Science | Regional Science | Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning | Economic GeographyDDC classification: 338.9 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Regional Externalities: an Introduction -- Regional Externalities: an Introduction -- Transport -- Modelling Transport in an Interregional General Equilibrium Model with Externalities -- External Effects in Road Traffic: the Pigou-Knight Model and its Extension to Situations With Endogenous Speed Choice and Heterogeneous Traffic -- On Traffic Congestion Models à la Mohring and Harwitz -- Local Collectors Versus Major Infrastructural Works -- Clusters and Product Chains -- Regional Differentiation and Location of Industrial Capacity in the Slovak Republic -- Automobile Sector in the Slovak Republic: Current Situation and Future Prospects -- IT Market and E-Commerce in Transition Economy: Network Externalities -- International Outsourcing in the Netherlands -- Regional Externalities and Clusters: a Dutch Network Case-Study -- Spatial Dimension of Externalities and the Coase Theorem: Implications for Co-existence of Transgenic Crops -- Regional Policy -- Abatement of Commuting’s Negative Externalities by Regional Investment in Houses and Buildings -- Risk as an Externality in Quantitative and Marginal Approaches -- Macro Policies and Regional Impacts in Norway -- The Economics of Tree-planting for Carbon Mitigation: A Global Assessment -- Positive Spillovers of Energy Policies on Natural Areas in Poland: an AGE Analysis.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The book offers practical and theoretical insights in regional externalities. Regional externalities are a specific subset of externalities that can be defined as externalities where space plays a dominant role. This class of externalities can be divided into three categories: (1) externalities related to mobility and transport; (2) external economies of scale and cluster effects, and (3) spatial environmental externalities. The book offers examples of the above mentioned categories.
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Regional Externalities: an Introduction -- Regional Externalities: an Introduction -- Transport -- Modelling Transport in an Interregional General Equilibrium Model with Externalities -- External Effects in Road Traffic: the Pigou-Knight Model and its Extension to Situations With Endogenous Speed Choice and Heterogeneous Traffic -- On Traffic Congestion Models à la Mohring and Harwitz -- Local Collectors Versus Major Infrastructural Works -- Clusters and Product Chains -- Regional Differentiation and Location of Industrial Capacity in the Slovak Republic -- Automobile Sector in the Slovak Republic: Current Situation and Future Prospects -- IT Market and E-Commerce in Transition Economy: Network Externalities -- International Outsourcing in the Netherlands -- Regional Externalities and Clusters: a Dutch Network Case-Study -- Spatial Dimension of Externalities and the Coase Theorem: Implications for Co-existence of Transgenic Crops -- Regional Policy -- Abatement of Commuting’s Negative Externalities by Regional Investment in Houses and Buildings -- Risk as an Externality in Quantitative and Marginal Approaches -- Macro Policies and Regional Impacts in Norway -- The Economics of Tree-planting for Carbon Mitigation: A Global Assessment -- Positive Spillovers of Energy Policies on Natural Areas in Poland: an AGE Analysis.

The book offers practical and theoretical insights in regional externalities. Regional externalities are a specific subset of externalities that can be defined as externalities where space plays a dominant role. This class of externalities can be divided into three categories: (1) externalities related to mobility and transport; (2) external economies of scale and cluster effects, and (3) spatial environmental externalities. The book offers examples of the above mentioned categories.

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