1st Edition

Targeting Regional Economic Development

Edited By Stephan J Goetz, Steven Deller, Tom Harris Copyright 2009
432 Pages 25 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

432 Pages 25 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

432 Pages 25 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Targeting regional economic development (TRED) has a long and rich tradition among academic economists and in the world of economic development practitioners. This book builds on a series of workshops and papers organized by The Northeast Regional Center for Rural Development (NERCRD) at the Pennsylvania State University and the Rural Policy Research Centre (RUPRI) at the University of Missouri.... Read more

 Part I: Policy Background 1. Introduction and Overview, Stephan J. Goetz, Steven C. Deller, and Thomas R. Harris 2. Historical Description of Economic Development Policy, Steven C. Deller and Stephan J. Goetz 3. Industry Clusters and Industry Targeting, Martin Shields, David Barkley, and Mary Emery 4. Overview of the Theory Behind TRED, Steven C. Deller 5. Porter’s Cluster Strategy and Industrial Targeting, Douglas Woodward and Paulo Guimarães 6. Impact of Agglomerations on the Economy, Todd Gabe Part II: Empirical Modeling Approaches 7. Modeling the Probability of Manufacturing Activity in the Great Plains John C. Leatherman and Terry L. Kastens 8. Regional Variation in the Location Choice of Goods- and Service-Producing Industries Hanas A. Cader, John C. Leatherman, and John M. Crespi 9. An Application of a Double Hurdle Firm Location Model: The Example of Montana, Alison Davis and Thomas R. Harris 10. Targeting Industry Clusters for Regional Economic Development: The REDRL Approach David L. Barkley and Mark S. Henry 11. Rural-Urban Economic Linkages: Implications for Industry Targeting Recommendations, David W. Hughes 12. Regional Cluster Analysis with Interindustry Benchmarks, Edward Feser, Henry Renski, and Jun Koo 13. Targeting with the Analytic Hierarchy Process, Thomas G. Johnson 14. The Community Business Matching Model: Combining Community and Business Goals and Assets to Target Rural Economic Development, Linda J. Cox, Jonathan E. Alevy, Thomas R. Harris, Barbara Andreozzi, Joan Wright, and George "Buddy" Borden Part III: Applications and Case Studies 15. Identifying Food Industry Clusters: A Comparison of Analytical Tools, Stephan J. Goetz, Martin Shields, and Qiuyan Wang16. Targeted Industry Analysis in a "Comprehensive" Economic Development Extension Program, James R. Nelson, Michael D. Woods, La Dee Homm, and Gerald A. Doeksen 17. TRED as an Educational Tool, Steven C. Deller, John Leatherman, and Martin Shields 18. Industry Targeting: Theoretical Underpinning and Practical Application, David W. Hughes 19. Import Substitution and the Analysis of Gaps and Disconnects, Steven C. Deller 20. What Have We Learned?Steven C. Deller, Stephan J. Goetz, and Thomas Harris.

Biography

Stephan Goetz is Director of Northeast Regional Center for Rural Development and Professor of Agricultural and Regional Economics at Pennsylvania State University, USA.

Steven Deller is Professor of Agricultural and Applied Economics at the University of Wisconsin, USA.

Thomas Harris is Director of the University Center for Economic Development at the University of Nevada, USA.

'Targeting regional economic development deals with the strategy that arguably occupies most of the economic development activity of cities and regions. With contributions from eminent academics intimately involved in local economic development practice, this book presents a tool-box of new and innovative methods for regional economic targeting along with the theoretical and conceptual moorings of these applications.' -- Professor Daniel Felsenstein, Director, Institute of Urban and Regional Studies, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.

"Goetz, Deller, and Harris’s collection, like all good collections, is the work of a community of scholars. But what is unique about it is that the authors are a community of scholars committed to both research and outreach. The result is a collection about targeted regional economic development (TRED) that reflects both current theory about regional economic growth and current theory about community development practice." -- Eric Thompson, Department of Economics, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (Journal of Regional Science, 2011)