Regional Structural Inequalities
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17649/TET.21.1.1094Keywords:
struktúravizsgálat, gazdaságszerkezet, regionális különbségek, Williamson-hipotézisAbstract
In this paper the main aspects of structural researches in the regional studies and spatial analyses are presented. The article offers a concise summary of measuring structural change and lays emphasis on the strengths and weaknesses of the vector-based methodology first used by V. V. Kossov. We argue that this method can be widely used to measure regional structural inequalities within a country as well as in the world. Three important factors have been analysed which affect economic structural inequality among European regions: the homogenous geographical endowments, the inequality-raising economical transformation process and the modifiable areal unit problem. Based on an empirical study of regional inequalities of 52 countries in the world we show that the inverted U-curve pattern of the Williamson-Kuznets hypothesis can also be observed between the level of the development and the regional inequalities of economic structures measured by the sectoral GVA.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors wishing to publish in the journal accept the terms and conditions detailed in the LICENSING TERMS.