Agglomeration and Growth: A Study of the Cambridge Hi-Tech Cluster

This chapter is an empirical study of the growth and change in the Cambridge high technology cluster. Cambridge shows the paradoxical co- existence of vastly smaller scale outcomes but many qualitative similarities to Silicon Valley. Our main questions from the empirical enquiry in this chapter are broad: First, how has the Cambridge hi- technology cluster changed and grown overtime? Secondly, we are interested in what sorts of microeconomic factors explain these bigger changes. With an understanding of these two questions we draw some implications of the Cambridge story for our understanding of what kinds of agglomeration economies and externalities were important to the growth of the Cambridge cluster. The failure of Cambridge to globalise to the same degree as Silicon Valley, we argue, accounts for the dissimilarities in the two experiences

[1]  Lilach Nachum,et al.  Foreign and Indigenous Firms in the Media Cluster of Central London , 2000 .

[2]  Barry Moore,et al.  Collective Learning Processes, Networking and 'Institutional Thickness' in the Cambridge Region , 1999 .

[3]  Erkko Autio,et al.  The growth and funding mechanisms of new, technology-based companies: A comparative study between the United Kingdom and Finland , 1994 .

[4]  Elizabeth Garnsey,et al.  The Genesis of the High Technology Milieu: A Study in Complexity , 1998 .

[5]  Iain Begg High Technology Location and the Urban Areas of Great Britain: Developments in the 1980s , 1991 .

[6]  Sarah Cooper,et al.  High Technology Industry, Agglomeration and the Potential for Peripherally Sited Small Firms , 1989 .

[7]  P Haug,et al.  Regional Formation of High-Technology Service Industries: The Software Industry in Washington State , 1991 .

[8]  Kevin Morgan,et al.  Regional advantage: Culture and competition in Silicon Valley and route 128: AnnaLee Saxenian, (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1994) 226 pp; Price [UK pound]19.95, ISBN 0 674 75339 9 , 1996 .

[9]  A. Chandler,et al.  Regional Advantage: Culture and Competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128 , 1994 .

[10]  Margaret Bruce,et al.  The Cambridge phenomenon: The growth of high technology industry in a university town: Segal, Quince and Partners 102 pages, £15.00, softback, 1985☆ , 1985 .

[11]  D. Keeble,et al.  High-Technology Industry and Regional Development in Britain: The Case of the Cambridge Phenomenon , 1989 .

[12]  Bill Wicksteed,et al.  The Cambridge phenomenon revisited , 2000 .

[13]  Craig S. Galbraith,et al.  High-Technology Location and Development: The Case of Orange County , 1985 .

[14]  W. Arthur,et al.  Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy , 1996 .