2011
DOI: 10.1093/jeg/lbq048
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Performing in Dutch book publishing 1880-2008: the importance of entrepreneurial experience and the Amsterdam cluster

Abstract: This paper investigates the spatial clustering of the book publishing industry. By means of a hazard model, we examine the effect of agglomeration economies and pre-entry entrepreneurial experience on the survival chances of publishing firms. Whereas such survival analyses have been conducted for manufacturing industries, they are still scarce for cultural and service industries. Based on a unique dataset of all book publishers founded between 1880 and 2008 in the Netherlands, the paper demonstrates that the c… Show more

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Cited by 71 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…EEG studies of, for example, the book publishing industry (Heebels & Boschma, 2011) and non-EEG studies of the cognitive-cultural economy (Scott, 2007) are similar enough to tourism studies to somewhat reduce the theoretical leap of faith.…”
Section: Path Dependence and New Path Creationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…EEG studies of, for example, the book publishing industry (Heebels & Boschma, 2011) and non-EEG studies of the cognitive-cultural economy (Scott, 2007) are similar enough to tourism studies to somewhat reduce the theoretical leap of faith.…”
Section: Path Dependence and New Path Creationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are also studies that find neither a positive nor a negative effect of clustering. In series of studies looking at firm survival in particular industries, including U.S. car industry (KLEPPER, 2007), the global fashion design industry (WENTING, 2008), the U.S. tire industry (BUENSTORF and KLEPPER, 2009), the U.S. semiconductor industry (KLEPPER, 2010), the German machine tool industry (BUENSTORF and GUENTHER, 2011) and the Dutch publishing industry (HEEBELS and BOSCHMA, 2011), firms in clusters did not survive longer than firms outside clusters. Importantly, the absence of cluster effects in all these studies becomes apparent only when controlling for pre-entry experience attributed to spinoffs.…”
Section: Firm Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empirical evidence from several clusters illustrates that spinoffs show a higher chance of survival and higher growth rates in comparison to other types of entrants (Boschma and Wenting 2007;Cheyre, Kowalski, and Veloso 2015;Heebels and Boschma 2011;Klepper 2007). Another important empirical result is that spinoffs tend to locate near the prior workplace of their founders.…”
Section: Theoretical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%