Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- I Introduction and Industry Overview
- II Cases from Industrializing Southeast Asia
- III Cases from China and India
- IV Cases from Industrialized Countries
- 9 The Development of Singapore's Electronics Sector
- 10 The Evolution of an Industrial Cluster and Its Policy Framework: The Case of Gumi City, Korea
- 11 The Case of the Electronics Sector in Kaohsiung Municipality, Taiwan
- 12 Sub-national Policy and Industrial Transformation in Conclusions
- V Conclusion
- Index
12 - Sub-national Policy and Industrial Transformation in Conclusions
from IV - Cases from Industrialized Countries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- I Introduction and Industry Overview
- II Cases from Industrializing Southeast Asia
- III Cases from China and India
- IV Cases from Industrialized Countries
- 9 The Development of Singapore's Electronics Sector
- 10 The Evolution of an Industrial Cluster and Its Policy Framework: The Case of Gumi City, Korea
- 11 The Case of the Electronics Sector in Kaohsiung Municipality, Taiwan
- 12 Sub-national Policy and Industrial Transformation in Conclusions
- V Conclusion
- Index
Summary
Introduction
North Brabant is a province located in the south of the Netherlands, bordering Belgium. It is the third most populated province of the Netherlands, with 2.4 million inhabitants and home to several medium-sized cities such as Eindhoven, Breda and Tilburg. It is one of the more wealthy provinces in the country with an estimated GRP per capita of €35.665 in 2011 (ING 2011). This is lower than in the western provinces of the Netherlands, where cities such as Amsterdam and Rotterdam are located, but is higher than many other provinces in the Netherlands. It has a relatively low unemployment rate of 5.3 per cent (2010), and relatively high labour productivity and productivity growth.
North Brabant is the leading technological region of the Netherlands, and is also innovative in the European Union (EU) context, as illustrated by its prominent position in the EU Regional Innovation Scoreboard (Hollanders, Tarantola, and Loschky 2009). Within the region of North Brabant, the city-region of Eindhoven plays a particularly important role, as highlighted by recent comparative European studies on knowledge-based regions, typifying it as “star niche player” and ranking it eighth among Europe's smartest medium-sized cities (Fernandez-Maldonado and Romein 2010).
The leading innovative performance of North Brabant (and Eindhoven City-Region) can be illustrated by a variety of indicators, including hightech employment, patent applications, research and development (R&D) expenditure, as well as the number of leading firms and universities. Thus, North Brabant is the Dutch region with the highest share of hightech employment. It made up 5.3 per cent of the labour force in South Netherlands in 2006, more than twice the share of the more affluent West Netherlands, where it comprised 2.2 per cent of the labour force.
The number of patent applications coming from North Brabant is impressive. It has one of the highest scores with respect to patent applications per capita amongst OECD regions and by far the highest in the Netherlands (Figure 12.1). In several sectors, North Brabant is the leading region with respect to patents.
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- Architects of Growth?Sub-national Governments and Industrialization in Asia, pp. 329 - 354Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2013