Abstract:
Clusters of geographical concentrations of related business firms are
assumed to confer competitive advantages to their members and their regions
via knowledge management and knowledge spillovers of tacit knowledge.
Despite mixed empirical evidence to support these claims, business clusters
remain at the forefront of regional development policies. Past research
indicates that cluster success factors may be distinct in different parts of the
world, in different economies and in different stages of their development.
Yet most studies focus on the success of a cluster as a whole and do not
assess the impact of cluster membership on a single firm due to the absence
of commonly agreed metrics. To address this problem, this article shifts the
focus from mere spatial proximity to the flow of information in business
networks and to the production, dissemination and absorption of knowledge.
In this context, information flow in business clusters is aided and abetted by
spatial proximity but the flow itself is the important success factor.
Validation of the hypothesis that the advantage of clusters has to do with
information flows, intellectual capital and knowledge spillovers will open
new avenues in cluster research