呼和浩特翻譯公司關(guān)鍵字: First, the natural advantages of agglomeration forces (natural advantage agglomeration forces). Natural advantages of agglomeration forces is the industry one of the fundamental role of geographic concentration. Natural advantages of the very broad, it includes not only natural resources and the natural environment a single advantage, but also a combination of both advantages and natural form of social and economic resources. If a region has developed an industry of natural resources, but to the natural environment is not suitable for the development of the industry, then the aggregation of natural resources will be very weak force. Elysian and Glasgow Translation (Ellison and Glaeser) through the U.S. industry gathering empirical analysis concluded that the natural advantages of agglomeration forces can explain about 20% of industry aggregation. Can explain the natural advantages of farming, wine, food manufacturing and processing industry, tourism, transportation, shipbuilding, mining and smelting industry and other raw materials industry aggregation. However, it is difficult to explain why natural advantages in some areas with the development of an industrial environment, natural resources and natural advantages of both, but it did not occur in the area of ??industrial aggregation phenomenon. Socio-economic resources, including cheap labor resources and convenient transportation conditions. Transportation conditions has been the classical location theory in the most basic elements, transportation convenience and low cost of many basic industries gathered momentum. The modern theory of corporate behavior also pointed out that some industries in the business location decisions on location costs are highly sensitive, location is the location of these industries in the enterprise in the decisive factor.Second, the spillover gathering force. Here is the location of the spill spillover refers to the completion of certain manufacturers will reduce the cost of other vendors to improve their論文摘要翻譯英文 competitiveness, or the phenomenon, including physical spillovers (such as a vendor built a second vendor to reduce transportation costs) and intellectual spillover. Spillover can be used to explain the intellectual high-tech industry, a large number
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