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Commuting and the Widening Regional Gap: Evidence from Innovation-Driven Growth

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  • Ran Ben Malka

    (Economics Department, Sapir Academic College, Ashkelon 79765, Israel)

Abstract

Context and Objectives: This longitudinal study examined the shifting dynamics of innovation concentration, regional inequality, and internal migration in Israel from 2000 to 2020, analyzing how centralized technological growth correlates with peripheral labor mobility. Methods: Utilizing a purely observational and correlational approach, the empirical framework tracks Central Bureau of Statistics time series data regarding commuting patterns, net internal migration, and composite socioeconomic living standard indices. Main Findings: The analysis revealed a significantly increasing tendency for peripheral residents to commute to central hubs, alongside stagnant permanent internal migration and a relative decline in peripheral living standards, underscoring an increasing structural dependence on the core. Limitations: Key limitations include the reliance on aggregated national-level data up to 2020 and the absence of occupational disaggregation, which prevents isolating specific labor segments or establishing direct causal mechanisms. Policy Implications: The study suggests that market-driven integration alone is insufficient to bridge spatial gaps. Carefully tailored interventions fostering local innovation capacity and alleviating the commuter burden are required to promote sustainable and balanced regional development.

Suggested Citation

  • Ran Ben Malka, 2026. "Commuting and the Widening Regional Gap: Evidence from Innovation-Driven Growth," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(11), pages 1-13, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:11:p:5360-:d:1952271
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