Convergence of Economic Growth and the Great Recession as Seen From a Celestial Observatory
Eamon Duede, Victor Zhorin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel remote sensing framework to analyze global economic convergence and divergence patterns, revealing how major crises and policies impact growth dynamics across regions and time.
Contribution
It presents a new economic observatory using satellite data to empirically validate macroeconomic convergence theories and analyze post-crisis growth patterns worldwide.
Findings
Global sigma-convergence observed post-Cold War
Disrupted convergence mechanisms after the Great Recession
Urban areas near capitals experienced higher growth post-crisis
Abstract
Macroeconomic theories of growth and wealth distribution have an outsized influence on national and international social and economic policies. Yet, due to a relative lack of reliable, system wide data, many such theories remain, at best, unvalidated and, at worst, misleading. In this paper, we introduce a novel economic observatory and framework enabling high resolution comparisons and assessments of the distributional impact of economic development through the remote sensing of planet earth's surface. Striking visual and empirical validation is observed for a broad, global macroeconomic sigma-convergence in the period immediately following the end of the Cold War. What is more, we observe strong empirical evidence that the mechanisms driving sigma-convergence failed immediately after the financial crisis and the start of the Great Recession. Nevertheless, analysis of both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic Growth and Productivity · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Economic theories and models
