19 results
Search Results
2. Serbia on the path to modern economic growth.
- Author
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Mijatović, Boško and Zavadjil, Milan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC convergence ,CORE & periphery (Economic theory) ,GROSS domestic product ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Given the scanty and inadequate studies on Serbia's growth performance before the First World War, this paper presents production‐side GDP estimates for Serbia for six years between 1867 and 1910. It probes into the growth dynamics, assessing convergence with the more developed countries of north‐western Europe, as well as progress towards achieving modern economic growth. Although the economy showed some dynamism in terms of overall GDP, per capita GDP in pre‐First World War Serbia grew by only 0.28 per cent per annum, as much of the overall GDP growth was eroded by rapid population growth. Far from converging with north‐western Europe, Serbia continued to fall behind. Sluggish structural transformation and slow income per capita growth suggest that Serbia's transition to modern economic growth was in its infancy. Growth in the dominant agricultural sector was extensive, driven by expanding arable land and population growth. Land was affordable and easy to obtain; hence, peasants invested little in new technologies. Meanwhile, the modern industrial and service sectors were below a threshold that could sustain rapid growth. Nevertheless, this study also highlights the rapid expansion of a small modern sector and export diversification that reflected emergent 'green shoots' in 1905–10. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The spatial dimension of economic growth and convergence.
- Author
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Bode, Eckhardt and Rey, Sergio J.
- Subjects
REGIONAL economics ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence ,SPACE in economics ,ECONOMIC models ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing - Abstract
The article aims to explain regional economic development and economic convergence under the theme of spatial econometrics. The major idea behind the economic convergence is decreasing returns to capital accumulation. The economic convergence can be achieved by variety of theoretical and statistical models. There are so many advanced studies came out. They will facilitate convergence model specification and statistical testing for better efficiency.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Public investment and regional growth and convergence: Evidence from Greece* Public investment and regional growth and convergence: Evidence from Greece.
- Author
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Rodríguez-Pose, Andrés, Psycharis, Yannis, and Tselios, Vassilis
- Subjects
PUBLIC investments ,REGIONAL economics ,TRANSPORTATION policy ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence ,EXTERNALITIES ,FISCAL policy - Abstract
This paper estimates the impact of public investment on regional economic growth and convergence at the NUTS 3 level in Greece. Using a new database of public expenditure per region for the period 1978-2007, it proposes a model which captures not just the impact of public investment in Greek prefectures, but also the spillover effects related to the existence of externalities from neighbouring regions. The results point to a positive long-run impact of public investment per capita on regional economic growth - but not on convergence - which also generates considerable spillover effects. However, the returns vary according to different types of public investment, with education and infrastructure spillovers having the highest impact. In general, public investment externalities seem to be more relevant for regional growth than direct public investment in each region. Finally, the impact of different types of public investment in Greece is mediated by politics and political factors, but the effect of politics disappears once we control for political-period-specific spatial-invariant variables. Resumen Este artículo estima el impacto de la inversión pública en el crecimiento económico regional y la convergencia a nivel NUTS 3 en Grecia. Haciendo uso de una nueva base de datos de gasto público por región para el periodo 1978-2007, se propone un modelo que identifica no solamente el impacto de la inversión pública en las prefecturas griegas, sino también los efectos de spillover relacionados con la existencia de externalidades procedentes de regiones vecinas. Los resultados apuntan a un impacto positivo a largo plazo de la inversión pública per cápita en el crecimiento económico regional - pero no en la convergencia - el cual genera unos efectos de spillover considerables. Sin embargo, los retornos varían de acuerdo con los diferentes tipos de inversión pública, siendo la educación y los spillovers de infraestructura los de mayor impacto. En general, las externalidades de inversión pública parecen tener una mayor relevancia para el crecimiento regional que la inversión pública directa en cada región. Para terminar, el impacto de los diferentes tipos de inversión pública en Grecia se ve influido por sus políticas y otros factores políticos, pero el efecto de las políticas desaparece una vez que se controlan las variables espacialmente-invariantes de tipo político ligadas a un periodo específico. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Multiple dimensions of regional economic growth: The Brazilian case, 1991−2000.
- Author
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Resende, Guilherme Mendes
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC indicators ,ECONOMIC convergence ,EXTERNALITIES - Abstract
This paper seeks to understand how the determinants of economic growth in Brazil may manifest themselves differently on various spatial scales between 1991 and 2000. Analysing this issue sheds light on the modifiable areal unit problem (a measurement issue). In addition, it also suggests potential explanations for the origin of this variability. This latter issue relates to the scale-dependent determinants of economic growth (a structural issue). The analysis reveals that the results change as the scale level changes and suggests a general framework for dealing with multiple spatial scales and model uncertainty. Moreover, the extent of the effects of spatial externalities and the issue of spatial heterogeneity are investigated. Resumen El objetivo de este artículo es entender como los factores determinantes del crecimiento económico de Brasil pueden mostrarse de manera diferente según la escala espacial entre 1991 y 2000. El análisis de este tema ilustra el problema de la unidad de superficie modificable (problema de medición). Además, sugiere también posibles explicaciones para el origen de esta variabilidad. Este último asunto esta relacionado con los factores dependientes de la escala que determinan el crecimiento económico (un problema estructural). El análisis revela que los resultados cambian a medida que lo hace la escala y sugiere un marco general para tratar con escalas espaciales múltiples y modelización de incertidumbre. Además, se investiga el alcance de los efectos de las externalidades espaciales y el problema de la heterogeneidad espacial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Regional disparities in the European Union: Convergence and agglomeration.
- Author
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Geppert, Kurt and Stephan, Andreas
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,INDUSTRIAL clusters ,MARKOV processes ,ECONOMIC convergence ,REGIONAL economic disparities - Abstract
Economic disparities between the regions of the European Union are of constant concern both for policy and economic research. In this paper, we examine whether there are overlapping trends of regional development in the EU: overall convergence, on the one hand, and persistent or even increasing spatial concentration (agglomeration), on the other. Kernel density estimation, Markov chain analysis and cross-sectional regressions provide evidence that convergence of regional per-capita income in the EU15 has become considerably stronger in the 1990s. The reduction of income disparities, however, is a phenomenon between nations but not between regions within the EU countries. European integration (and possibly European regional policy) fosters the catching-up of lagging countries but at the same time forces towards agglomeration of economic activities tend to increase disparities within the EU member states. Resumen. Las disparidades económicas entre regiones de la Unión Europea son una preocupación constante para la investigación relacionada con políticas y con economía. En este artículo examinamos si existen tendencias superpuestas de desarrollo regional en la UE: convergencia en términos generales, por un lado, y por otro una concentración espacial (aglomeración) continua o incluso en aumento. La estimación por núcleos ( kernel) de la función de densidad, el análisis mediante cadenas de Markov y las regresiones transversales aportan pruebas de que la convergencia de ingresos regionales per cápita de la UE15 se ha fortalecido considerablemente en la década de los noventa. La reducción en la disparidad de ingresos, sin embargo, es un fenómeno entre naciones pero no entre regiones dentro de países de la UE. La integración europea (y quizá la política regional europea) fomenta la puesta al día de los países rezagados pero al mismo tiempo las fuerzas conducentes a la aglomeración de actividades económicas tienden a aumentar las disparidades dentro de los estados miembros de la UE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Are regional incomes in Malaysia converging?
- Author
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Abdullah, Abdul Jabbar, Doucouliagos, Hristos, and Manning, Elizabeth
- Subjects
ECONOMIC convergence ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC development ,EXTERNALITIES ,POVERTY - Abstract
Copyright of Papers in Regional Science is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. PERSISTENCE IN CONVERGENCE AND CLUB FORMATION.
- Author
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Stengos, Thanasis, Yazgan, M. Ege, and Özkan, Harun
- Subjects
ECONOMIC convergence ,CONVERGENCE clubs (Economic theory) ,ECONOMIC development ,REGIONAL economics ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
ABSTRACT: In this paper, we examine the convergence hypothesis using a long memory framework that allows for structural breaks and does not rely on a benchmark country using both univariate and multivariate estimates of the long memory parameter
d . Using per capita GDP gaps, we confirm the findings of non‐stationarity and long memory behavior that have been found previously in the literature using univariate tests. However, the support for these findings is much weaker when using a multivariate framework, in which case we find more evidence of stationary behavior. Based on these results, we also investigate club formation, something that would suggest the presence of conditional convergence. We describe a club formation methodology using the sequential testing criteria that we have employed in our analysis as the basis for forming clusters or clubs of countries with similar convergence characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. TESTING CATCHING-UP BETWEEN THE DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: "GROWTH RESISTANCE" AND SOMETIMES "GROWTH TRAGEDY".
- Author
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Dufrénot, Gilles, Mignon, Valérie, and Naccache, Théo
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,GROSS domestic product ,EMPIRICAL research ,ECONOMIC convergence ,PER capita ,ECONOMETRIC models ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper provides empirical evidence that there is no convergence between the GDP per-capita of the developing countries since 1950. Relying upon recent econometric methodologies (non-stationary long-memory models, wavelet models and time-varying factor representation models), we show that the transition paths to long-run growth (the catch-up dynamics) are very persistent over time and non-stationary, thereby yielding a variety of potential steady states (conditional convergence). Our findings do not support the idea according to which the developing countries share a common factor (such as technology) that eliminates per-capita output divergence in the very long run. Instead, we conclude that growth is an idiosyncratic phenomenon that yields different forms of transitional economic performance: growth tragedy (some countries with an initial low level of per-capita income diverge from the richest ones), growth resistance (with many countries experiencing a low speed of growth convergence), and rapid convergence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The effect of migration on income growth and convergence: Meta-analytic evidence.
- Author
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Ozgen, Ceren, Nijkamp, Peter, and Poot, Jacques
- Subjects
INTERNAL migration ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence ,REGIONAL economic disparities ,META-analysis - Abstract
We compare a set of econometric studies that measure the effect of net internal migration in neoclassical models of long-run real income convergence and derive 67 comparable effect sizes. The precision-weighted estimate of beta convergence is about 2.7 per cent. An increase of one percentage point in the net migration rate of a region increases the per capita income growth rate in that region on average by about 0.1 percentage points. Introducing a net migration variable in a growth regression increases the estimate of beta convergence slightly. Studies that use panel models or IV estimation methods yield smaller coefficients of net migration in growth regressions, while the opposite holds for regressions controlling for high-skilled migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Economic transition and growth.
- Author
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Phillips, Peter C. B. and Donggyu Sul
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence ,CREATIVE ability in technology ,ECONOMETRICS ,ECONOMIC models ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Some extensions of neoclassical growth models are discussed that allow for cross-section heterogeneity among economies and evolution in rates of technological progress over time. The models offer a spectrum of transitional behavior among economies that includes convergence to a common steady-state path as well as various forms of transitional divergence and convergence. Mechanisms for modeling such transitions, measuring them econometrically, assessing group behavior and selecting subgroups are developed in the paper. Some econometric issues with the commonly used augmented Solow regressions are pointed out, including problems of endogeneity and omitted variable bias which arise under conditions of transitional heterogeneity. Alternative regression methods for analyzing economic transition are given which lead to a new test of the convergence hypothesis and a new procedure for detecting club convergence clusters. Transition curves for individual economies and subgroups of economies are estimated in a series of empirical applications of the methods to regional US data, OECD data and Penn World Table data. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. An institutional convergence perspective on China’s recent growth experience: A research note.
- Author
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Ying, Long Gen
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence ,MATHEMATICAL models of economic development ,ECONOMIC models ,INVESTORS ,COMMUNITY development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This research note reconsiders China’s recent growth experience from an institutional convergence perspective. Based on the neoclassical production function of growth, a stochastic growth model incorporating an institutional variable is specified and estimated using cross-province socioeconomic data for 1984–2001. While three explanatory variables all contribute to growth, the most significant and important effect comes from the variable of institutional progress. This suggests that China’s good economic performance since 1978 can be attributed to the convergence of China’s economic institutions with the economic institutions of modern capitalist economies, particularly the East Asian capitalist economies. If this suggestion is accepted, then China’s newly emerging regionalism can be better understood as resulting from an uneven institutional convergence process in a spatial context. These results are different from those of conventional Chinese regional development studies. They are important because they represent the first detailed evidence on the role of institutional effects in a Chinese regional economic study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Access to Finance Thresholds and the Finance-Growth Nexus.
- Author
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Abdmoulah, Walid and Jelili, Riadh Ben
- Subjects
FINANCE ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC indicators ,GROWTH rate ,REGIME change ,EMPIRICAL research ,ECONOMIC convergence - Abstract
Based on Aghion et al. (), this article provides new insights regarding whether financial development can affect economic growth non-linearly by adopting the concept of threshold effects. The empirical approach adopted in this article allows for the finance-growth relationship to be piecewise linear with a set of indicators including access to finance acting as a regime-switching trigger. Using cross-country observations from 144 countries stretching from 1985 to 2009, strong evidence of threshold effects in finance-growth link is found. It is suggested that financial development in general, and access to finance in particular, is among the important forces contributing to cross-country (non)-convergences in growth rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Internet infrastructure and regional convergence: Evidence from Turkey.
- Author
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Celbis, Mehmet Güney and de Crombrugghe, Denis
- Subjects
- *
INTERNET & society , *ECONOMIC convergence , *TELECOMMUNICATION & society , *ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC conditions in Turkey - Abstract
Abstract: This study presents novel evidence regarding the role of regional internet infrastructure in reducing regional per capita income disparities. We base our study on the assumptions that (1) the diffusion of information homogenizes regional economies through reducing the dissimilarities in institutions and culture, and (2) the telecommunication capacity, represented by the internet infrastructure of a region, facilitates this flow of information. Using the data from the 26 statistical NUTS‐2 regions of Turkey for the period 1999–2011, we find evidence that internet infrastructure increases the speed of regional convergence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. DISCONTINUITY OF OUTPUT CONVERGENCE WITHIN THE UNITED STATES: WHY HAS THE COURSE CHANGED?
- Author
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Choi, Chi ‐ Young and Wang, Xiaojun
- Subjects
ECONOMIC convergence ,ECONOMIC development ,HUMAN capital ,TECHNOLOGY & economics ,UNITED States economy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Has the progress of output convergence changed within the United States? This article examines the output convergence among U.S. states for the last five decades by making several improvements over the extant literature. By applying a battery of convergence tests designed to capture nonlinear transitional dynamics to real output per worker data (i.e., nominal values deflated by state-level price), we find that output convergence has not been a feature of the continental United States since the 1970s. Instead, output convergence has proceeded among four subgroups within which constituent states have certain characteristics in common. Our regression analysis suggests that state-level characteristics related to technology and human capital play a crucial role in accounting for the formation and composition of convergence clubs, in agreement with the recent theoretical models of growth and development (e.g., Aghion et al. 2009; Gennaioli et al. 2013b). The level of technology, proxied by patents, turns out to be a consistently significant determinant even after controlling for endogeneity, suggesting that frictions in the diffusion of technology and human capital may have led to clustering of states with different levels of productivity. Our results therefore cast doubt on the common view that diffusion of knowledge and technology across state borders is frictionless. ( JEL O47, O51) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE SOURCES OF GROWTH AND CONVERGENCE* FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE SOURCES OF GROWTH AND CONVERGENCE.
- Author
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BadunENko, Oleg and Romero ‐ Ávila, Diego
- Subjects
ECONOMIC convergence ,ECONOMIC development ,SAVINGS ,LABOR productivity ,ECONOMIC efficiency ,ECONOMIC models - Abstract
We extend the deterministic, nonparametric production frontier framework by incorporating financial development. Our analysis convincingly shows that (1) failure to account for financial development overstates the role of physical capital accumulation in labor productivity growth, (2) most of this overstated contribution stems from the efficiency-enhancing role of well-functioning financial institutions, (3) international polarization is solely driven by efficiency changes, and (4) increased distributional dispersion of productivity is primarily driven by technological change. Model's extensions to account for the growth effect of changes in the institutional environment only add to the argument about the overstated role of physical capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Demand for information and communication technology-based services and regional economic development.
- Author
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de Castro, Eduardo Anselmo and Jensen-Butler, Chris
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION technology , *REGIONAL economics , *ECONOMIC convergence , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The relationship between the uptake of Information and Communication Technology-based services (ICT) and regional economic development is examined here; we address in particular the idea that ICT will promote regional economic convergence. We argue that ICT can generate contradictory trends of regional convergence and divergence and that, under conditions of non-regulated market supply, the effects leading to divergence can be dominant. The approach is based on the development of a regional demand model, which is the combination of two sub models, one dealing with the effects of network externalities and the other based on the concept of potential demand for ICT. The main conclusion is that less populous, more peripheral and poorer regions with weaker existing social and economic networking will encounter problems of insufficient demand. This in turn will delay the launch of new services and slow the rate of uptake. Negative dynamic effects of low ICT use on economic performance will generate a vicious circle of cumulative disadvantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Economic information versus quality variation in cross-country data.
- Author
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Dawson, John W., Dejuan, Joseph P., Seater, John J., and Stephenson, E. Frank
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC convergence - Abstract
Data quality in the Penn World Tables varies systematically across countries that have different growth rates and are at different stages of economic development, thus introducing measurement error correlated with variables of economic interest. We explore this problem with three examples from the literature, showing that the problem appears to be minor in growth convergence regressions but serious in estimating the effect of income volatility on growth and in a cross-country test of the Permanent Income Hypothesis. The results suggest, at the least, a need for performing appropriate sensitivity tests before drawing conclusions from analyses based on these data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Theories of Convergence and Growth in the Classical Period: The Role of Science, Technology and Trade.
- Author
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Elmslie, Bruce and Criss, Antoinette James
- Subjects
SCIENCE & society ,ECONOMIC convergence ,COMMERCE ,HISTORY of economics ,ECONOMIC development ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
Recent interest in convergence raises questions in the history of thought concerning the origins of the concern over convergence. We find that in the classical period, interest in convergence centred around the connection between the growth of neighbouring countries and one's own country. Convergence was often thought to be parasitic; countries grow at the expense of their neighbours. Writers taking this view advocated policies designed to seal their country from the negative effects of such growth. Writers making the opposite connection, i.e. growth is contagious, advocated open market policies and based their optimism on the limitless expansion of scientific knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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