Rainer vom Hofe - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Conrad Kickert related author profile picture

Janina  Gosseye related author profile picture

Renato Telles related author profile picture

Teresa Barata-Salgueiro related author profile picture

Giorgio Limonta related author profile picture

Gabriele Cavoto related author profile picture

Vero Smith related author profile picture

Hyesun  Jeong related author profile picture

Emily Talen related author profile picture

Keumsook Lee related author profile picture

Uploads

Papers by Rainer vom Hofe

Research paper thumbnail of Critical mass matters: The long-term benefits of retail agglomeration for establishment survival in downtown Detroit and The Hague

Urban Studies Journal, 2017

This paper explores the long-term sensitivity of street-level retailers to agglomeration to corro... more This paper explores the long-term sensitivity of street-level retailers to agglomeration to corroborate its theorised benefits under current economic modelling. It does so by studying the annualised chance of closure of retailers as a function of the number of surrounding retailers, as well as how different types of retailers respond differently to agglomeration. A time fixed effect model is used to study the mortality rate of retailers over the period of a century. The study draws from a self-created database of retail establishment locations and types in Detroit, Michigan and The Hague, Netherlands between 1911 and 2011. The case study cities have been selected for their combination of similarities and differences. While downtown Detroit is infamous for its high vacancy and The Hague has been praised as a vibrant Dutch urban core, both cities have in fact suffered significant loss of retail activity over the past century, allowing for the study of retail closure under different socioeconomic and cultural circumstances. The study demonstrates a significant sensitivity of retailers to agglomeration in both cities. The study also indicates a specifically high sensitivity to agglomeration in the case of comparison shops. Without a critical mass of peers, these retailers will face a significantly higher than average chance of closure. The sensitivity to agglomeration is remarkably similar between both case studies, urban cores which at first sight have experienced rather different fates over the past century. This cross-cultural similarity may point to a generalisability of the underlying mechanism of sensitivity to agglomeration.

Research paper thumbnail of Critical mass matters: The long-term benefits of retail agglomeration for establishment survival in downtown Detroit and The Hague

Urban Studies Journal, 2017

This paper explores the long-term sensitivity of street-level retailers to agglomeration to corro... more This paper explores the long-term sensitivity of street-level retailers to agglomeration to corroborate its theorised benefits under current economic modelling. It does so by studying the annualised chance of closure of retailers as a function of the number of surrounding retailers, as well as how different types of retailers respond differently to agglomeration. A time fixed effect model is used to study the mortality rate of retailers over the period of a century. The study draws from a self-created database of retail establishment locations and types in Detroit, Michigan and The Hague, Netherlands between 1911 and 2011. The case study cities have been selected for their combination of similarities and differences. While downtown Detroit is infamous for its high vacancy and The Hague has been praised as a vibrant Dutch urban core, both cities have in fact suffered significant loss of retail activity over the past century, allowing for the study of retail closure under different socioeconomic and cultural circumstances. The study demonstrates a significant sensitivity of retailers to agglomeration in both cities. The study also indicates a specifically high sensitivity to agglomeration in the case of comparison shops. Without a critical mass of peers, these retailers will face a significantly higher than average chance of closure. The sensitivity to agglomeration is remarkably similar between both case studies, urban cores which at first sight have experienced rather different fates over the past century. This cross-cultural similarity may point to a generalisability of the underlying mechanism of sensitivity to agglomeration.

Log In