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Social Capital, Barriers to Production, and Capital Shares: Implications for the Importance of Parameter Heterogeneity from a Nonstationary Panel Approach

Peter Pedroni

No 2004-03, Department of Economics Working Papers from Department of Economics, Williams College

Abstract: Recent advances in the growth literature have proposed that difficult to quantify concepts such as social capital may play an important role in explaining the degree of persistent income disparity that is observed among countries. Other recently explored possibilities include institutional mechanisms which generate barriers to aggregate production. An important limitation for empirical work in this area stems from the fact that it is difficult to distinguish sources of heterogeneity when direct observations are not available. In this study, we show how developments in the analysis of nonstationary dynamic panels can aid in this endeavor. In contrast to traditional panel data analysis, this approach focuses explicitly on low frequency behavior. Under relatively mild assumptions, the approach can be used to infer properties of aggregate production which are robust to the presence of large classes of unobserved features. In this framework we are able to estimate and test the implied distribution of production function parameters that would be required in order to generate conditional forecast convergence of per capita incomes even when some of the key factors required to explain growth are unobserved. The results indicate that in order to fully explain the observed persistence in the disparity of per capita incomes, the manner in which unobserved mechanisms influence production must go beyond merely accounting for differences in the trending behavior of aggregate productivity. Specifically, the results demonstrate that if such mechanisms are to be successful empirically, then they must also be able to account for cross country heterogeneity in steady state capital shares. This adds to a growing literature that provides support for models with multiple production regimes.

Keywords: Growth; Convergence; Social Capital; Nonstationary Panels (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C23 O41 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 58 pages
Date: 2004-05
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Published in Journal of Applied Econometrics, March 2007, v. 22, iss. 2, pp. 429-51.

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