Discussion Papers 1988. 
Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
102 
Marek POTRYKOWSKI 
CONCENTRATION AND DECENTRALIZATION PROCESSES IN 
POLISH INDUSTRY 
Industrialization is the principal basis of 
Polish economic policy. The industrial growth rate 
in our country since World War II has been one of 
the highest in the world. The greatest investment 
outlays were made in industry, which provided most 
of the new jobs. In the period 1946-1982, employ-
ment in industry increased  3.5  times: from 1.4 
million to more than  5  million. The number of in-
dustrial. plants grew during that period from 21 
thousand to  59  thousand, and the number of large 
enterprises /employing more than 1000 people/ grew 
from 542 in 1960 to 774 in 1982 
/Lijewski, 
1985/. 
Following World War II, large disparities 
existed in the spatial distribution of industry. 
Namely, industry was concentrated mainly in the 
Southern part of Poland, which resulted primarily 
from the locations of mineral resource deposits 
/in particilar anthracite, zinc, lead, ferrous and 
copper ores and various raw materials for the con- 
struction industry/. Besides that, the Western part 
of Poland was more industrialized than the Eastern 
part of the country, which, in turn, resulted from 
the historical situations of these parts of our 
country. 
In order to determine more precisely the 
degree of industrialization of particular areas, the 
following classification can be used 
/Misztal 

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Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
103 
and Kaczorowski, 1983/: 
1. very weakly industrialized areas, with the 
industrial employment indicator value below 50 pe-
ople per 100C inhabitants, which approximately cor-
responds to 10 % of the active population; 
2. weakly industrialized areas, with the in-
dustrial employment indicator' value between 50 and 
100 persons, that is, some 10-20 % of the active pcp- 
ulation; 
3. medium industrialized areas, with the in-
dicator value between 100 ard 150 persons per 1000 
inbabitants, that is, some 20-30 % of the active pap." 
ulation; 
4. highly industrialized areas, with the in-
dicator value between 150 ard 200 persons employed 
in industry, accounting for approximately 30-40 % 
of the active population; 
5. very highly industrialized areas, with the 
industrial empaoyment indicator value above 200 per-
sons per 1000 inhabitants, i.e., more than 40 % of 
the active population. 
According to this classification, in 1946 on-
ly the area of present Lodz voivodship, out of the 
territoriescfttrpresett  49 voivodships, was a very 
highly industrialized area, this fact being to some 
extent caused by the very small area of this voivod-
ship. The territories of the present Katowice and 
Walbrzych voivodships were medium industrialized, 
while the territories of the other  46  voivodships 
were either weakly /12 voivodships/ or very weakly 
/34/ industrialized. Thus, the most numerous group 
was constituted by the very weakly industrialized 
areas 
/Misztal and Kaczorowski, 1969/. 

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i o4 
/111E:1-4.  distribution of industrial employment 
for 1946 to 1984/. 
The great disparities existing in the spatial 
distribution of industry prompted the state during 
the first post-war years to target their reduction 
as the primary goal of regional policy. The first 
period of economic reconstruction /i.e., 1946-1949/, 
however, was based almost exclusirely on the repair 
and reactivation of industrial plants destroyed 
during the war; consequently, most of the country's 
industrial potential was recreated. Employment in-
crease in industry was approximately 50 %. The speed 
of reconstruction in various regions of the country 
was quite differentiated, with the greatest in.. 
creases occu/ting in Warsaw, Wroclaw, and Szczecin 
voivodships, whose capitals had been big industrial 
centers before the war; as well as in Opole and 
Zielona Gora voivodships. 
In 1950, the so called six-year plan was 
adopted for the period 1950-1955. It was an extra-
ordinarily ambitious plan, not only in the sense cf 
creating the basic industrial potential, but also 
in its tendency toward more uniform distribution of 
the potential throughout the country's territory. 
The plan was based cn a policy of forced industri-
alization to be carried out within the system and 
forms of a socialist economy. A second parallel goal 
was inclueed, defined as the elimination or spatial 
social differentiation of class character through 
more uniform distribution of productive forces. It 
is easy to observe that the first goal contained 
only indirect implications and tasks for spatial 
policies, while the second ore involved such poli-
cies directly and specifically /Dziewonski, 1986/. 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
under 50 
51 - 100 
101 - 150 
EZE  151 - 200 
E22222  above 201 
FIGURE 1 Industrial employment per 1,000 inhabi-
tants 1946 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
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i o 6 
1  under 50 
51 - 100 
101 - 150 
151 - 200 
above 201 
FIGURE  2 Industrial employment per 1,000 inha-
bitants 1960 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.

I  unaer 50 
51 - 100 
ZEZ  101 - 150 
V;07r;  151 - 200 
above 201 
FIGURE 3 Industrial employment per1,000 inhabi-
tants 1975 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
under 50 
51 - 100 
,o, 
150 
_  200 
 above  201 
FIGURE 4 
Industial employment per1,000 inhabi-
tants 1984 

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Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
109 
The plan envisaged construction of more than 1200 
industrial plants, with a large share of them 
located in weakly industrialized voivodships. Lack, 
however, of appropriately prompt production effects 
/construction of some plants lasted more than  7 
years/ and slow increase - and sometimes ever 
dEcrease - of the real wage levels led to imbal-
ances in the development of particular branches 
of the economy and to a build-up of strong social 
tensions. That is why the number of plants to be 
constructed was limited and approximately 470 plants 
were dropped from the plan. This concerned primari-
ly the free-location plants, whose purpose was to 
be the activation of weakly industrialized areas, 
so that efforts concertrated on finishing theEe 
plants, whose construction had already started. Dur-
ing this period, though, growth relied on "exten-
sive" industrial development, based upon employment 
increase. The first 5-year plan /period 1956-1960/ 
assumed primarily extension of the existing plants 
and completion of those whose construction had been 
started, thus giving up costly and little effective 
investments in weakly developed regions. 
In the decade  1961  to  1970,  the industriali-
zation process underwent significant acceleration. 
Initially, this process was characterized by a 
strong tncrease cf investment outlays, related main-
ly to the extension of raw material and energy bases 
by putting into operation resource deposits discov-
ered before: lignite in the Konin basin, copper ores 
in the Legnica-Glogow basin, and sulphur in the 
Tarnobrzeg voivodship. Besides that, efforts concen-
trated mainly on the extension of plants built in 
the preseeding period and on modernization of old 

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Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
110 
plarts. There were, on the other hand, relatively 
few big ard medium industrial plants, whose con-
struction was started after 1960 and which were 
put into operation during the period in question. 
Similarly, as in the period 1950-1960 and also in 
the subsequent decade, more than  80 %  of all the 
investmert outlays went into heavy industry, with 
the greatest increases of their share in the in-
vestment totals displayed by fuel-and-erergy and 
metal-machinery industries, with the latter ac-
courting for over  50 %  of the whole employment 
increase in industry. 
During the '60s, there occurred a well 
pronounced acceleration of the industrializatior 
process in the weakly industrialized regions 
Nisztal and Kaczorowski, 19E3/. This acceleration 
was best seen in the areas where newly developed 
mineral resource deposits were put into operation 
/Konin, Legnica, and Tarnobrzeg voivodships/, and 
on the territories of Krosno, Plock, Radom, and 
Slupsk voivodships. On the other hand, in 9  voi-
vodships with the lowest industrialization level, 
located in the Eastern part of Poland, i.e., in 
Biala Podlaska, Chelm, Ciechanow, Lomza, Ostroleka, 
Przemysl, Suwalki, and Zamosc voivodships as well 
as in Leszno viovodship, acceleration of the in-
dustrialization process, ,as measured by employment 
dynamics in industry, was still quite weak. Invest-
ment made in these voivodships wert primarily into 
wood, mineral, light, and food processing industri-
es located there, i.e., into little capital inten-
sive industries. Were industrialization measured 
with the magnitude of investment outlays made, one 
could conclude that in these 10 voivodships there 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
1 11 
occurred in the period 1961-1970 no effective ac-
celeration of industrialization process. The 10 
voivodships, accounting for 10.5 % of the nation's 
population, obtained a mcre  3 %  share in total in-
vestment outlays in Polish industry. More thar 1/3 
cf all the investment outlays in industry, made 
over the period in question, concerned Plants lo-
cated vithin the territories of Katowice, Bielsko-
-Biala, Czestochowa, Cracow, and Opole voivodships. 
These investments were highly capital-intensive 
/:rasource extraction ane metallurgy/ and did not 
create very many new jobs. 
The policy, effectively carried out in this 
period, resulted from the pressure of factors moti-
vating concentration of industrial production and 
from the tendency towards a more uniform develop-
ment of all the regions. Concentration of indus-
trial production was motivated by the economies of 
scale and agglomeration, by non-uniform distribu-
tion of mineral resources, and tasides that by 
almost uniform pricess within a branch throughout 
the country and low - officially set - transporta-
tion prices. The tendency to disperse industry re-
sulted both from social reasons and from over sat-
uration of certain areas with industry. 
The beginning of the subsequent decade, 
1971-1980, was a starting point for the period of 
great acceleration of industrialization in Poland. 
Production increases mainly were due to moderniza-
tior of plants, to intensification of production 
processes, and to better use of reserves. There 
followed significant shifts in the structure cf in-
vestment outlays. The shares of fuel-and-energy and 
chemical industries decreased, while those cf elec- 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
112 
tronic, metallurgic, and consumption goods in-
dustries increased. Still, however, a significant 
majority of investment outlays was absorbed by 
extensions to the industries turning out means of 
production. 
In the period 1971-1975, there also oc-
curred essential changes in the geographical dis-
tribution of investment outlays. Inversions of 
some of the development trends of the '60s could 
be observed. The upper Silesian region /Katowice, 
Bielsko-Bial.a, and Opole voivodships/ again in-
creased its share. The shares of central-Eastern 
voivodships /Kielce, Radom, and Sieradz/, of port 
and ship-yard voivodships /Gdansk and Szczecin/, 
as well as of some other voivodships /Korin/ in-
creased, too. There was a decrease in the inveet-
ment shares of the South-Western voivodships, and 
of those cn whose territories construction of 
large-scale industrial plants had been terminated 
/Legnica, Wloclawek, Plock, and Jelenia Gora/. 
Generally speaking, in the first period of the 
decade of the '70s, the development of various in-
dustry branches ard various regions was more har-
monious. Simultaneously, it was the period of a 
very big investment effort. The dynamics of growth 
of investment outlays increased  3.5  times. While 
in the years 1961-1970 average ,annual growth of 
investment value did not 'exceed  9 %,  in the period 
1971-1975  it attained  34 % /Mistal and Kaczorowski, 
1983/. Thus, great increase of investment outlays 
was made possible by foreign credits. It was the 
continuation of this policy of accelerated industr-
alization beyond 1975 and growing foreign debt that 
led to economic disaster. 

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Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
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Naturally, all these fluctuations of goals, 
policies, and priorities in the whole process of 
industrialization were reflected also in spatial 
policies by directly quickening or delying the 
implementation of the second goal, one of more 
even distribution of productive forces; and in-
directly by their impact on the structures and 
processes of urbanization. When in the late fif-
ties it was realized that an even industrializa-
tion of all regions is neither posible nor desir-
able, this second goal was modified and superseded 
by regional equalization in levels and conditions 
of living with an equal opportunity for individual 
development included. 
Concentration of industry is an integral 
part of the industrialization process. Concentra-
tion proceeds in at least four dimersions /Lijews-
ki, 1978/: 
- technical, through installing of increas-
ingly effective equipment, enabling production 
growth calculated per employee or per unit cost; 
- economic, through concentration of means, 
employment, production and other effects in a lim-
ited number of plants, whose share in the whole of 
industry thereby increases; 
- organizational, through mergers of small 
plants and enterprises /leading sometimes to liqui-
dation of some of them/ into larger economic organ-
isms; 
- spatial, resulting from the previous three 
tendencies; 
there follows a decrease of the number of localities 
and points in which industry is located, with simul- 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
nit 
taneous increase of the share of large centers and 
industrial agglomerations. 
In the course of post-war policies of devel-
opment of industrial centers, three phases can te 
distinguished: 
1. During the '50s, the principle of more 
uniform geographical distribution of industry was 
being heralded. In order to keep to this principle 
smaller, but more densely distributed, industrial 
centers were created. Limited total investment 
volume did not allow the network of these centers 
to encompass the whole of Polish territory. 
2. In the '60s, investment outlays were 
concentrated in several dozen development centers 
/growth centers/ such as, for instance: Plock, 
Wloclawek, Torun, Ostroleka, and Pulawy. Many of 
these centers became capitals of new voivodships 
in  1975. 
3. After  1970,  positive economic and social 
features of development of large urban and urban- 
industrial agglomerations were emphasized. This 
view induced acceleration of the concentration of 
industry. 
Industrial concentration results from techni-
cal and economic prerequisities. This process is, 
as a rule, advantages for a given branch or for the 
whole of industry. From the point of view of society 
as a whole, however, concentration entails numerous 
negative effects. Since growth of industry in the 
largest towns and industrial regions was too fast 
for the local labour force supply and for housing 
construction, it had been deemed proper already in 
the /60s to adopt the principle of decongestion of 

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Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
115 
the biggest industrial centers as the leading 
principle in formation of regional policies of 
spatial allocation of productive forces. The 
decongestion /"deglomeration"/ principle was the 
fourth official principle to be implemented in 
the policies of industrial location, after: /1/ 
principle of deconcentration of Upper Silesian 
Industrial Region and Lodz /1947-1949/: /2/ 
principle of uniform distribution of industry 
/1950-1955/;  and  /3/  principle of rational dis-
tribution of industry /1955-1960/, /see Misztal 
and Kaczorowski,  1983/. 
The decongestion principle was first imple-
mented at the beginning of the '60s, although ap-
propriate legal acts were formulated only at the 
turn of the '50s and '60s. The whole action was at 
that time described as the "industrial deglomera-
tion" and involved transfer of some /mostly/ small 
industrial plants to smaller cities. After several 
years, it turned out that this policy /only partly 
successibl/ led in larger cities to serious shortages 
of manpower and underutilization of productive 
potential in industrial plants, most of which were 
concentrated in those areas. The entire policy was 
either scrapEd completely or disallowed /Dziewors-
ki, 1986/. Decongestion policies, caused mainly by 
difficulties encountered in proper development of 
large agglomErations, have brought some effects 
through outward dislocation of some of the modern-
ized industrial plants within the territories of 
Warsaw voivodship and its adjacent voivodships. 
During that period, some 20 branches of large Warsaw 
enterprises were located in various urban centers. 
Simultaneously, these policies also had negative ef- 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
116 
fects, such as important acceleration of the process 
of ageing of the Warsaw population and idleness of 
a portion of the existing production capacities. 
Similarly, as in the case of Warsaw, large 
enterprises located in other towns, whose develop-
ment in their primary locations was limited, started 
to set 
their branches outside the boundaries of 
these towns, relocating their mainly less compli-
cated and more labour intensive functions. These 
branches were for the most part being set up in 
small towns within the less economically developed 
areas, disposing of labour force reserves. In this 
way, an essential factor of activation of regions 
lagging in economic development was created. Until 
the end of the '60s, there emerged in Poland several 
dozen such branches, ussually employing hundreds of 
people. The greatest number of such branches was set 
up by the enterprises located in Warsaw. It should 
be mentioned, though, that implementation of the 
decongestion policy brought about tangible results 
only within the areas of present Warsaw and Cracow 
voivodships as well as in the central part of the 
Upper Silesian Industrial Region. 
Because of the differentiated development 
of industry in various voivodships, their ranks 
with respect to numbers of employees changed. Only 
Katowice voivodship retained its first rank. Voi- 
vodships with large shares of older industry, which 
occupied high positions just after World War II, 
regressed down the ranking. Intensively industri, 
alized voivodships and these, whose industry was 
reconstructed after the war's destruction, advanced 
to higher positions. Shifts of ranks are, however, 
not significant, Voivodships move by just a couple 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
117 
of positions up or down the ranking. Even those 
voivodships in which there were quite important 
investments mede, like Konin, Tarnobrzeg, and 
Legnica voivodships, advanced only slightly in 
the ranking of industrialization. Changes in the 
sequence of voivodships would be greater if the 
fixed assets value measure could be taken into 
account. 
The picture of the dynamics of industriali-
zation growth - having in mind dynamics relative 
to the initial level within a voivodship - is, most 
generally speaking, inverse to the picture obtained 
using absolute increases of employment in industry 
as the measure of industrialization dynamics. 
Namely, in the most industrialized voivodships, the 
relative dynamics of industrialization growth is 
the faintest, since these voivodships do not re-
quire further industrialization and efforts are 
even undertaken to limit the development of such 
branches of industry, which are not necessary in 
these voivodships. With the initial high emrloyment 
level, even a significant increase of the number of 
employees yields a relatively low growth index value. 
The situation is just the opposite in the weakly 
industrialized voivodships, where even a small in-
crese in the number of people employed in industry 
may mean multiplication of the initial level. That 
is why all these voivodships display the highest 
relative growth indices. 
The voivodships with the highest dynamics 
index values on the map form a half-ring to the 
East and North of the country's center. The lowest 
dynamics index values characterize the South-Nov" 
thern and central-Western voivodships. Exceptions 

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Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
118 
are privided by Legnica and  KOrtifl VOiVOCIShirF, 
which are sort of "islands" of rapl.d greutL 
within the areas of a weaker increase of industial 
development. 
Although in absolute numbers big cities are 
still in the lead, the rate of their industrial 
growth is slowing and the number of new locations 
in these cities is decreasing. This tendency is 
seen clearly when one compares locations in two 
post-war periods: until 1966, when half of the in-
vestigated factories had been launched; and after 
1966. In the earlier period, the eleven biggest 
cities accounted for 24 per cent of new locations, 
whereas in the later for 17.5 per cent /Lijewski, 
1985/. The share of new factories located in medium-
sized cities, between 20,000 and 100,000 in popula-
tion, has grown relatively the most rapidly. 
Figure  5 
 /after Lijewski, 1985/ shows the 
spread of industry in Poland in the period 1945- 
1982. The general trend was for new industrial 
ventures to shift from the south and west to the 
north and east. Naturally, there were exceptions, 
one of them being the industrialization of Warsaw, 
which largely outstripped the development of 
neighbouring voivodships. The most important old 
industrial regions /Upper Silesia and Lodz/ and 
some old industrial cities /Poznan, Bydgoszcz, and 
Gdansk/ witnessed a late upsurge of investment; 
their median dates of industrialization lay between 
1968 and 1970. Investments in those localities 
often consisted of modernization or reconstruction 
of older factories. 
Two general development trends can be spe- 
cified: 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
1 19 

6, 
03 
Median data of starling major 
industrird plants , 1946 - 1982 
bofore 1980 
711""'""  
190-1986 
after 1970 
Source: Lijewski, 1985 
FICURE 5 Spread of industry in Poland 
1945-1982 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
120 
- a decrease of the relative rate of growth 
accompanying the attainment of higher levels of in-
dus tria liza tion ;? and 
- a decrease of discrepancies among the 
growth dynamics indicies of particular voivodships; 
this decrease is the result of both the generally 
advancing industrialization levels and the conscious 
policy of equalizing the growth rates of particular 
regions. 
References 
DZIEWONSKI, K. /1986/ Changing goals of spatial  
policies and planning in Poland. Paper pre-
sented at 8th British-Polish Seminar in 
London, July 1986. pp. 15. 
LIJEWSKI, T. /1978/ Uprzemyslowienie Polski  1945-  
-1975,  przemiany strukturalna i przestrzenne  
/Industrialization of Poland 1945-1975, 
structural and spatial changes/, PWN, War-
szawa. 
LIJEWSKI, T. /1985/ The spread of industry as a 
consequence of the location of new factories 
in Poland, 1945-1982, Geographia Polonica, 
51, pp. 199-206. 
MISZTAL, S. - KACZOROWSKI, W. /1983/ Regionalne  
zroznicowanie procesu uprzemyslowienia Polski  
1945..1975. /The regional pattern of the in-
dustrialization process in Poland 1945-1975/, 
Studia KPZK PAN, 76, Warszawa. 
WILCZEWSKI,  R. 
LIJEWSKI, T. 
KORTUS, B. /1978/ 
Spatial industrial changes in Poland since 
1945, in: F. E. Hamilton, ed., Industrial  
change: international experience and public 
policy, Longman, London - New York, pp. 80- 
-98. 

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Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
121 
Table 1 
Industrial  employment per  1000 
inhabitants 
1946 
1960 
1975 
1984 
1. Warsaw 
43 
130 
147 
112 
2. Biala Podlaska 

19 
56 
54 
3.  Bialystok 
14 
55 
97 
91 
4.  Bielsko—Biala 
80 
172 
204 
150 
5.  Bydgoszcz 
58 
107 
137 
121 
6.  Chaim 
11 
42 
93 
80 
7.  CiechanOw 

23 
56 
6o 
8.  Czestochowa 
53 
122 
153 
126 
9. Elblag 
42 
68 
97 
88 
10. Gdansk 
54 
103 
128 
103 
11. GorzOw Wlkp. 
32 
81 
120 
97 
12. Jelena GOra 
87 
137 
209 
162 
13. Kalisz 
34 
87 
134 
114 
14. Katowice 
176 
234 
237 
216 
15. Kielce 
28 
86 
144 
123 
16. Konin 
69 
28 
87 
101 
17. Koszalin 

52 
86 
76 
18.  Cracow 
47 
115 
133 
106 
19. Krosno 
26 
63 
125 
118 
20. Legnica 
4o 
1°5 
165 
159 
21. Leszno 
29 
6o 
84 
79 
22. Lublin 
16 
65 
108 
100 
23. Lomza 

19 
51 
53 
24.  Lodz 
210 
260 
259 
180 
25. Nowy Sacz 
18 
50 
80 
75 
26.  Olsztyn 
19 
51 
84 
81 
27.  Opole 
41 
120 
1.47 
129 
28.  Ostroleka 

20 
63 
67 

Marek Potrykowski : Concentration and Decentralization Processes in Polish Industry 
Discussion Papers 1988. Spatial Organization and Regional Development 102-122. p.
122 
'946 
196o 
1975 
1984 
29.  Pila 
34 
6o 
95 
84 
30.  Piotrkow Trybun. 
40 
93 
147 
139 
31.  Plock 
19 
52 
102 
102 
32.  Poznan 
65 
112 
129 
101 
33.  Przemysl 

32 
72 
76 
34.  Radom 
18 
68 
126 
112 
35.  RzeszOw 
12 
61 
120 
121 
36.  Siedlce 

23 
65 
64 
37.  Sieradz 
12 
47 
85 
79 
38.  Skierniewice 
34 
63 
105 
88 
39.  Slupsk 
14 
50 
105 
94 
40.  Suwalki 

37 
7o 
66 
41.  Szczecin 
4o 
84 
116 
lo6 
42.  Tarnobrzeg 
16 
58 
129 
114 
43.  TarnOw 
16 
68 
112 
96 
44.  Torun 
29 
89 
127 
111 
45.  Walbrzych 
99 
185 
218 
176 
46.  Wloclawek 
25 
52 
87 
83 
47.  Wroclaw 
59 
ill 
152 
121 
48.  Zamosc 
11 
28 
6o 
59 
49.  Zielona Gora 
66 
lo3 
148 
120