The Output Convergence Debate Revisited: Lessons from recent developments in the analysis of panel data models
M Hashem Pesaran, Ron Smith

TL;DR
This paper critically revisits the output convergence debate, highlighting the limitations of traditional methods and demonstrating that advanced estimators like DCCE provide more reliable insights into cross-country and within-country growth dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces the use of dynamic common correlated effects estimators for more accurate convergence analysis, addressing limitations of traditional methods and providing new empirical evidence.
Findings
Little evidence of per capita output convergence across countries
Very slow cross-country growth convergence
Fast within-country convergence
Abstract
This paper provides a critical examination of the empirical basis of the output convergence debate in the light of recent developments in the analysis of dynamic heterogeneous panels with interactive effects. It shows that popular tools such as Barro's cross-country regressions and two-way fixed effects (TWFE) estimators that assume parallel trends and homogeneous dynamics lead to substantial under-estimation of the speed of convergence and misleading inference. Instead, dynamic common correlated effects (DCCE) estimators due to Chudik and Pesaran (2015a) provide consistent estimates and valid inference that are robust to nonparallel trends and correlated heterogeneity and apply even if there are breaks, trends and/or unit roots in the latent technology factor. It also suggests a way to estimate the effect of slowly moving determinants of growth. The theoretical findings are augmented…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic Growth and Productivity · Economic and Technological Innovation · Economic Growth and Development
