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Economic Convergence A Theoretical Review and Application to European Regions Lorenzo Ferrari Nightlights in Europe Why are we interested in convergence? • Half the GDP in Europe is produced in a transnational geographic region, called the “core” • The core is characterised by higher per-capita income and lower unemployment rate • The reduction of regional disparities is a main goal for the EU, already stated in the Treaty of Rome (1957) • Has convergence taken place at the regional level in the EU? What convergence are we looking for? Poor economies grow faster than rich ones Faster growth when far from steady state ABSOLUTE CONDITIONAL • The neoclassical model only predicts conditional • We need the two economies to have similar steady states, implied by similar tastes and access to technology • This motivates the investigation of regional convergence Two Concepts of Convergence Catching up process according to which poor countries tend to grow faster than rich ones Reduction in the cross-sectional dispersion of percapita income β-convergence σ-convergence Necessary but not sufficient condition β-Convergence log 𝑦𝑖𝑡 𝑦𝑖,𝑡−1 = 𝑎𝑖𝑡 − 1 − 𝑒 −β ∙ log 𝑦𝑖,𝑡−1 + 𝑢𝑖𝑡 , • β > 0 convergence • β < 0 divergence Unexpected changes in production conditions or preferences • Intuition: if β > 0, then 1 − 𝑒 −β is positive and − 1 − 𝑒 −β is negative. This implies that there exists a negative relation between the initial level of per capita income and its growth σ-Convergence • The variance of per-capita income at time t is 2 2 𝜎𝑡2 = 𝑒 −2β 𝜎𝑡−1 + 𝜎𝑢𝑡 • This is a first-order differential equation with solution 2 2 𝜎 𝜎 𝑢 𝑢 −2βt + 𝜎𝑡2 = 𝜎02 − 𝑒 1 − 𝑒 −2β 1 − 𝑒 −2β σ-Convergence • The steady-state variance of per-capita income is 2 𝜎 𝑢 𝜎2 = 1 − 𝑒 −2β • The steady-state dispersion of per-capita income decreases in β but increases in 𝜎𝑢2 , the variance of the random disturbance. • This is why we say that β-convergence is a necessary but not sufficient condition for σconvergence And now…some empirical evidence from EU regions… Empirical Analysis • I study convergence among European regions in terms of per-capita GDP • Data: Per-capita GDP in PPS (Purchasing Power Standards) for NUTS2 and NUTS3 from 1995 to 2010 • Convergence if a negative coefficient for log 𝑦𝑖,𝑡−1 (I do not estimate β directly) log 𝑦𝑖𝑡 𝑦𝑖,𝑡−1 = 𝑎𝑖𝑡 − 1 − 𝑒 −β ∙ log 𝑦𝑖,𝑡−1 + 𝑢𝑖𝑡 , Nomenclature of territorial units for statistics NUTS 2 - Regions Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). NUTS 3 - Provinces Beta-Convergence - EU27 regions NUTS3 – 1995/2010 0 -.5 0 .5 .5 1 1 1.5 1.5 NUTS2 – 1995/2010 8 8.5 9 9.5 lngdp1995 growth1995_2010 10 Fitted values -0.2239435*** Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). 10.5 8 9 10 lngdp1995 growth1995_2010 Fitted values -0.155746*** 11 β -Convergence - EU27 regions Estimation of the coefficient for the single observations sorted from the poorest to the richest. Recursive Rolling Regression NUTS2 DIVERGENCE NUTS3 CONVERGENCE DIVERGENCE IN THE CASE OF THE FIRST OBSERVATIONS! Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). 8 9 10 11 0 -.2 FINANCIAL -.1 NUTS2 0 .2 .4 NUTS2 .6 .1 .8 .2 β -Convergence - EU27 regions 9 9.5 lngdp2000 growth2000_2007 10 10.5 lngdp2007 growth2007_2010 Fitted values 11.5 Fitted values -0.0520234*** -.5 0 0 NUTS3 .4 CRISIS .2 NUTS3 .6 .5 .8 1 1 -0.1961544*** 11 8 9 10 lngdp2000 growth2000_2007 11 12 Fitted values -0.1658848*** Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). 8 9 10 lngdp2007 growth2007_2010 11 Fitted values -0.0558489*** 12 β -Convergence -New Entrants Regions • • • • • • • • • • • • Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). Bulgaria Cyprus Czech Republic Estonia Hungary Latvia Lithuania Malta Poland Romania Slovakia Slovenia β -Convergence -New Entrants Regions NUTS3 – 2000/2010 0 .2 .4 .5 .6 1 .8 1 1.5 NUTS2 – 2000/2010 8 8.5 9 lngdp2000 growth2000_2010 9.5 Fitted values -0.1918162*** 10 7.5 8 8.5 9 lngdp2000 growth2000_2010 9.5 Fitted values -0.1977416*** • Lower coefficient than EU27 Capital vs. Rural regions. • The process of transition affected the quality of data and the significance of the regression from the 1995 to the 2010. Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). 10 The effect of being a New Entrant on growth Introducing the dummy variable it is possible to evaluate the contribution that belonging to a New Entrant has on growth. The results show a positive effect on growth from the 2000 to the 2007. 0.2370913*** Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). This positive coefficient however significantly reduces after the crisis of the 2007. 0.0711268*** Beta-Convergence – Regions of the Founders of the EU • Belgium • France • Germany • Italy • Luxembourg • Netherlands Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). β -Convergence – Regions of the Founders of the EU NUTS3 – 2000/2010 0 -.2 .1 0 .2 .2 .3 .4 .4 .6 NUTS2 – 2000/2010 9 9.5 10 lngdp2000 growth2000_2010 10.5 Fitted values 11 9 9.5 growth2000_2010 0.0075194 NOT SIGNIFICANT Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). 10 lngdp2000 10.5 11 Fitted values -0.0321639** There is no evidence of any convergence between these regions. Mixed growth performances The effect of being a Founder on growth Introducing the dummy variable «eu_found» it is possible to estimate the the contribution that being a founder has on growth. The results show a negative effect on growth from the 2000 to the 2007 This effect becomes however slightly positive in the afternight of the financial crisis -0.0361925*** 0.0268983*** Good performances of Germany and absence of the data for Italian provinces. Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). β -Convergence - Regions of the PIGS • Greece • Ireland • Spain • Portugal Only NUTS3 level Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). β -Convergence - Regions of the Poor Four NUTS3 – 2000/2010 .6 .8 Lower coefficient than EU27 -.2 0 .2 .4 • These regions have a more homogeneous distribution of per-capita GDP. 8.5 9 9.5 lngdp2000 growth2000_2010 10 Fitted values -0.1559148*** Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). 10.5 • The most important contribution to convergence came from the New Entrants. β -Convergence - Regions of the PIGS Introducing the dummy variable «poor» it is possible to estimate the the contribution that belonging to a Poor country has on growth. The results suggest a positive effect when the years from the 1995 to the 2010 are considered It appears that belonging to a Poor region becomes a disadvantage when the estimation refers to the 20002010 time interval 0.0510249*** -0.0402644*** This could be explained remembering how these country experienced a sustained growth until the explosion of the financial crisis. Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). σ-Convergence across countries Reduction starting from very high levels. Slight increase . Slight reduction after a peak in 1999. The New Entrants are slightly converging but disparities between regions are still enormous The EU funders are slightly diverging: some regions have grown continuously, others lagged behind Substantial Stability. Financial Crisis Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). The financial crisis has not any appreaciable effect on dispersion. σ-Convergence - regions within the same country (1) EU FOUNDERS There is evidence of a slight convergence between the regions of the EU founders for what regards the dispersion of their per-capita GDP. Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). σ-Convergence - regions within the same country NEW ENTRANTS The regional dispersion of the per-capita GDP is very high and generally increasing for the countries that recently joined the Union. Most of the percapita GDP is concentrated in the capital region. Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). σ-Convergence - regions within the same country POOR FOUR Mixed Evidence Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). Conclusions • European Regions appear to have converged both from the point of view of the growth of their percapita GDP and its regional dispersion. • This result however masks some country-specific trends and dynamics and the effects of the crisis that risks to jeopardise this process. Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). Conclusions • The eastern enlargements altered the allocation of the European budget for social and territorial cohesion. Future enlargements will further complicate the puzzle. • The existence of a core-periphery pattern in Europe makes cohesion spending necessary for ensuring a balanced growth of the peripheral regions. Source: Lorenzo Ferrari (2013). Practical Session • We use a dataset downloaded from EUROSTAT http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/data/database • For β-convergence we use STATA • .do file • dataset • For σ -convergence we use EXCEL