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Original Articles

Regional Employment Growth in the Cultural and Creative Industries in Germany 2003–2008

Pages 967-990 | Received 01 Oct 2009, Accepted 01 Jun 2010, Published online: 30 Jun 2011
 

Abstract

Since the end of the 1990s cultural and creative industries have generated increasing attention in academic, public and political discourse. Nowadays, these industries are seen to be important factors of regional development. Because an urban environment offers a special quality of place, which is stimulating, motivating, challenging and inspiring for creative people, cultural and creative industries are spatially highly concentrated in the major cities of each country. Furthermore, urban places have an advantage compared to more peripheral or rural regions by offering the creative talents particular surroundings with openness, diversity, tolerance and internationality to realize their individual life styles. Overall, it can be assumed, that the cultural and creative industries fulfil their role as engines of innovation, growth and increasing employment rates predominantly in major cities. The empirical analysis of regional employment shifts in the cultural and creative industries in Germany shows that the main hubs of the cultural and creative industries in Germany generated above-average growth rates between 2003 and 2008. The more rural regions declined in most cases against the overall employment growth of the cultural and creative industries in Germany by 5.0%. Hence, the peripheral regions afar from the urban cores could not benefit from the growth of cultural and creative industries. Furthermore, a shift analysis shows the importance of locational effects in explaining the regional employment dynamics in these industries.

Notes

It should be mentioned here that academic research of psychologists in the field of creativity (Kaufman & Sternberg, Citation2006; Schuler & Görlich, Citation2007) is largely ignored and not implemented within the discourse around cultural and creative industries. The particular characteristics of creative people which shall develop the expected innovations are hardly mentioned, nor are the results of this research with regard to the well-directed facilitation of creativity and creative processes.

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