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Regional performance and characteristics of Indian manufacturing industry

Abstract
This paper investigates the regional characteristics of Indian manufacturing industry. Its aim is to assess whether geography plays any major role in determining the performance or characteristics of Indian manufacturing firms, and in order to do this, it presents the results of cross-section regressions estimated on the basis of a balanced sample of 1607 firms across the 30 Indian states. The results suggest that firm performance and characteristics are related to many of the expected industrial organization variables. However, there is also evidence of significant region-state influences on both the performance and characteristics of Indian manufacturing industry. As such, the results demonstrate that analyses which focus solely on standard non-spatial industrial organization variables will fail to explain much of the cross-sectional variation in firm performance and characteristics. In particular, while there are no systematic simple centre-periphery variations in the Indian regional economic system, there is evidence to suggest that industrial spatial concentration, regional specialization, and regional market size play a key role in determining the performance and characteristics of Indian manufacturing industry.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Kambhampati, U. & McCann, P. (2007). Regional performance and characteristics of Indian manufacturing industry. Regional Studies, 41(3), 281-294.
Date
2007
Publisher
Routledge
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
Publisher version