Projects per year
Abstract
Club-convergence analysis provides a more realistic and detailed picture about regional income growth than traditional convergence analysis. This paper presents a spatial econometric framework for club-convergence testing that relates the concept of club-convergence to the notion of spatial heterogeneity. The study provides evidence for the club-convergence hypothesis in cross-regional growth dynamics from a pan-European perspective. The conclusions are threefold. First, we reject the standard Barro-style regression model which underlies most empirical work on regional income convergence in favour of a two regime [club] alternative in which different regional economies obey different linear regressions when grouped by means of Getis and Ords local clustering technique. Second, the results point to a heterogeneous pattern in the pan-European convergence process. Heterogeneity appears in both the convergence rate and the steady-state level. But, third, the study also reveals that spatial error dependence introduces an important bias in our perception of the club-convergence and shows that neglect of this bias would give rise to misleading conclusions.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1 - 29 |
Journal | Annals of Regional Science |
Volume | 40 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2006 |
Projects
- 1 Finished
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Regional Income Growth and Club-Convergence in Europe - Insights From a Spatial Econometric Perspective
Fischer, M. M. (PI - Project head), Bartkowska, M. (Researcher), Kunnert, A. (Researcher), Riedl, A. (Researcher), Sardadvar, S. (Researcher) & Stumpner, P. (Researcher)
1/08/06 → 31/07/10
Project: Research funding