“…There is substantial literature on this issue dating from Hotelling (1929), who argued that firms competing on the basis of prices tend to locate far from each other, whereas firms competing in quantities tend to agglomerate at the centre of the market. Previous studies (Collins & Sherstyuk, 2000;Kim, Lozano-Vivas, & Morales, 2007;Ning & Haining, 2003;Plummer, 1996;Rushton & Thill, 1989;Williams & Kim, 1990) present neoclassical models of spatial competition, proposing development of formal models for a limited range of institutional structures: spatial price, equilibrium, oligopolistic competition and monopolistic competition. Others have studied spatial competition in context of the labour market and its effect on wages and unemployment (Nakagome, 1986), and in the context of the advantages of distant firms in exploiting local monopolies economies versus agglomeration economies that may offset harmful competition effects (Tsang and Yip, 2009).…”