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Title:
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| Number: | 03-06 |
| Author: | |
| Issue Date: | April 2003 |
| Abstract: | We use U.S. county-level data consisting of 3,058
observations,
to study growth determination and measure the speed of income
convergence.
County-level data are particularly valuable for studying convergence
because
they allow us to study a sample with substantial homogeneity and
exceptional
mobility of capital, labor and technology without sacrificing the
benefits
of a large number of cross-sectional units. Our data set allows us to
include
nearly 40 different conditioning variables to study their effect on the
counties’
balanced growth paths. We report estimates using a 2SLS instrumental
variables
method which yields consistent estimates, as well as estimates from
standard
OLS. In order to explore possible heterogeneity in the
conditional
convergence rates, we report the estimates for the entire data set as
well
as for subsets including metro counties, non-metro counties, and five
regional
groupings. Our findings include: (i) while OLS yields convergence rates
around
2 percent, the 2SLS method yields rates between 6 and 8 percent; (ii)
the
estimated convergence rates are not constant across the U.S., for
example,
the counties in the Southern states converge at a rate that is more
than
two and half times faster than the counties located in the New England
states;
(iii) the extent of the public sector at all levels (federal, state and
local)
negatively affects growth and there is no evidence of the public sector
becoming
more productive at more decentralized levels; (iv) the relationship
between
a population’s educational attainment and economic growth is nonlinear
depending
on the years of education considered; and (v) large presences of both
finance,
insurance and real estate industry and entertainment industry are
positively
correlated with growth while the percent of a county’s population
employed
in the education industry is negatively correlated with economic growth. |
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