» Details

Germany's Creative Sector and its Impact on Employment Growth

Wedemeier, Jan

Germany's Creative Sector and its Impact on Employment Growth

A Theoretical and Empirical Approach to the Fuzzy Concept of Creativity: Richard Florida's Arguments Reconsidered

Series: Strukturwandel und Strukturpolitik. Structural Change and Structural Policies. - Volume 22

Year of Publication: 2012

Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2012. XXIV, 140 pp., 15 tables, 9 graphs
ISBN 978-3-631-63582-7 hardback  (Hardcover)
ISBN 978-3-653-01388-7 (eBook)

Weight: 0.320 kg, 0.705 lbs

available Hardcover
available PDF
 
  • Hardcover:
  • SFR 45.00
  • €* 39.80
  • €** 40.90
  • € 37.20
  • £ 29.80
  • US$ 48.95
  • Hardcover

» Currency of invoice * includes VAT – valid for Germany and EU customers without VAT Reg No
** includes VAT - only valid for Austria

Discipline

Book synopsis

The creative sector is considered to impact on employment and creative sector's employment growth. Using a fixed effects model with time-lags, evidence is found that the creative sector fosters the growth rate of employment in German regions. Large shares of creative professionals lead to an increase in employment, but also reduce the growth rate of the creative sector. However, the growth rates are unequally distributed between the regions. Initially large shares of creative professionals further push the regional concentration of those professions in highly agglomerated regions. Driving forces for the concentration are specific characteristics, i.e. knowledge spillovers and cultural amenities. Moreover, for the evolution of the creative sector current policy strategies for the promotion of creative cities are presented.

Contents

Contents: Regional Employment Growth - Creative Sector - Human Capital - Creative Professionals' and Ethnic-Cultural Diversity - Self-Reinforcing Process - Knowledge Spillovers and Cultural Amenities - Hamburg's Creative Sector.

About the author(s)/editor(s)

Jan Wedemeier joined the Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWI) in 2007. He was a Research Fellow at Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei in Milan. His main research interests include regional and creative economy. He studied economics at the University of Applied Science in Bremen and the Malmö University in Sweden.

Series

Structural Change and Structural Policies. Vol. 22
Edited by Wolfram Elsner and Henning Schwardt