4.5 Article

Pigs in space: Modeling the spatial structure of hog production intraditional and nontraditional production regions

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
卷 84, 期 2, 页码 259-278

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8276.00296

关键词

agglomeration economics; environmental regulation; firm location; hog production; market access; rural-urban interface; spatial econometrics

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We posit a spatially explicit, county-level model of the hog production sector and estimate how numerous firm-specific, locality-specific, and spatial agglomeration factors affect the location, movement, and intensity of hog production within 15 key hog production states. Spatial agglomeration, urban encroachment, input availability, firm productivity, local economy, slaughter access, and regulatory stringency variables affect the sample regions' spatial organization. Analyses suggest that western states in the sample may shape hog production levels by wielding traditional business recruitment and retention tools (e.g., tax rates, environmental stringency) while Corn Belt states may shape hog production via nontraditional tools (e.g., land use controls).

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