Abstract
Introduced in French planning for the IVth plan (related to years 1962–1965), regional planning was, until the VIth plan (related to 1971–1975), only a regionalisation of national figures, and so had no feedback on national planning. The purpose of the REGINA model proposed in 19711 was to avoid such a dichotomy and to analyse, inter dependency, regional and national problems. REGINA is a large ‘regional—national’ model2 which, because of its interdependent structure, enables the analysis not only of the impact of national development on regional development, but also of the impact of regional development (and regional policy) on national figures.
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References
See R. Courbis, ‘Le Modèle REGINA, modèle du developpement national, régional et urbain de l’économie française’, Economie Appliquée 28 (1975): 569–600.
R. Courbis, ‘The REGINA model: a regional-national model for French planning’, Regional Science and Urban Economics 9 (1979): 117–139.
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© 1982 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, The Hague
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Courbis, R., Cornilleau, G. (1982). The Regina Model: A Short Presentation and Some Main Results. In: Plasmans, J. (eds) Econometric Modelling in Theory and Practice. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-7482-1_4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-7482-1_4
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