
Kerstin Enflo
Professor

Trends and cycles in regional economic growth: How spatial differences shaped the Swedish growth experience from 1860–2009
Författare
Summary, in English
Using a novel dataset of regional GDP per worker from 1860 to 2009, this paper analyzes communalities in regional long-term growth trajectories for 24 Swedish regions. Wavelet Analysis and Principal Component Analysis are used to decompose regional growth trajectories and assess the extent that regional growth patterns share common trends and cyclical properties. The study found that regional growth trends show strong common features among groups of regions in Sweden. Natural-resource-rich regions benefited from the First Industrial Revolution. Contrary to regional development in many other European economies, a growth surge in Sweden later benefited virtually the whole country during the Second Industrial Revolution. The countrywide trend of growth slowed in the 1970s when the metropolitan regions became the main growth engines. In mid- and short-term cyclical movements, regions display more heterogeneous growth patterns, and we find evidence of mid-term, sequential lead–lag patterns in regional growth, especially between urban cores and the periphery.
Avdelning/ar
- Institutionen för kulturgeografi och ekonomisk geografi
- Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen
- Nationalekonomiska institutionen
Publiceringsår
2011
Språk
Engelska
Sidor
538-555
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Explorations in Economic History
Volym
48
Issue
4
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
Elsevier
Ämne
- Economic Geography
- Economic History
Nyckelord
- Economic history
- Economic geography
- Regional growth
- Wavelet analysis
- Sweden
Aktiv
Published
Projekt
- Swedish Historical Regional Accounts 1571–2010
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 0014-4983