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Moving, people!

I'm moving this article to "Cluster development" as the more common Google term, keeping "Cluster initiative" just as a redirect. And similarly I'm moving "Porter's cluster" to "Business cluster". --Mereda 13:23, 8 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This page needs a rewrite/restatement, as I cannot understand what clusters and Economic clusters are just by reading the text. The article tries to explain it by one or two sentences and then goes on to talk about how many governments went on using clusters. But why/for what? --SkyHiRider (talk) 21:54, 15 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]

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Semi-protected edit request on 25 October 2021

Industrial Clusters in China[1]

The development of industrial clusters in China has become a subject of international interest, but attention has primarily focused on government efforts to attract FDI to promote industrial clusters and regional development. The local process which supports the rise and growth of clusters driven by the domestic firms has been relatively ignored in this debate. Thus, this article considers the analytical framework of strategic coupling and uses a case study of the Wuxi semiconductor industry to investigate the cluster formation, dynamics and effects driven by domestic, rather than FDI, firms with the mediating role of the transnational Chinese technical community, the state and domestic firms. It concludes that the rise and growth of the semiconductor domestic-led cluster in Wuxi is not dependent on FDI, but instead results from the dynamic interplay of several elements. Effects of technology spillover from the government-funded research institutions, as well as mutual competition and co-operation in technological emulation among domestic firms are important elements for the development of the domestic-led cluster. Moreover, all these elements lie within the strategic coupling of the regional assets and the transnational Chinese technical community, mediated by the state. It is the the state that has mobilised regional assets to negotiate with overseas technology talent for strengthening global linkages and facilitating the entrepreneurial knowledge absorption of domestic leading firms—a feature which has not been theoretically observed in Western countries. Jayveepinch (talk) 04:10, 25 October 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Cluster Development

Clusters increases productivity with which companies can compete.[2]The competition in the cluster let the companies use strategies and innovate through application of new technologies to become highly competitive. One of the most known cluster is the Silicon Valley. The Components that made up the success of the Silicon Valley are the universities, government, entrepreneurs, venture capital, mature corporations, industrial research centers and service providers.[3] These components, to have a competitive industry, organizations must determine the internal strength, take advantage of it and develop it. Denden25 (talk) 04:02, 25 October 2021 (UTC) Denden25[reply]

  1. ^ Chou, T. L., Ching, C.-H., Fan, S., & Chang, J.-Y. (2011). Global Linkages, the Chinese High-tech Community and Industrial Cluster Development: The Semiconductor Industry in Wuxi, Jingsu. Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.), 48(14), 3019–3042. https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098010396237
  2. ^ Porter, M. E. (2000). "Location, Competition, and Economic Development: Local Cluster in a Global Economy". Economic Development Quarterly. 14 (1): 15-34. doi:10.1177/089124240001400105.
  3. ^ Engel, Jerome (2015). "Global Clusters of Innovations: Lessons from Silicon Valley". California Management Review. 57 (2). California: The Regents of the University of California. doi:10.1525/cmr.2015.57.2.36.