“During the past fifteen years, Swedish government policy has decentralized post-secondary education throughout the country. We investigate the economic effects of this decentralization policy on the level of productivity and innovation and their spatial distribution in the Swedish economy. We analyze productivity, measured as output per worker at the level of the locality, for 284 Swedish communities during a 14 year period, and innovation, measured by commercial patents awarded in 100 Swedish labor market areas during an 8 year period. These economic outcomes, together with data documenting the decentralization of university- based researchers, permit us to estimate the effects of exogenous changes in educational policy upon increases in productivity and the locus of innovative activity. We find important and significant effects of this policy upon economic output and the locus of knowledge production, suggesting that the decentralization has affected regional development through local innovation and increased creativity. Moreover, our evidence suggests that aggregate productivity was increased by the deliberate policy of decentralization.”
Roland Andersson (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)
John Quigley (University of California, Berkeley)
Mats Wilhelmsson (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)
Date: 2006-07-13
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cdl:bphupl:1068&r=edu
(resumo de “paper”, disponível no sítio referenciado)
(resumo de “paper”, disponível no sítio referenciado)
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