2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1435-5957.2006.00086.x
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Regional growth in Western Europe: detecting spatial misspecification using the R environment

Abstract: Abstract. The work discussed in Bivand and Brunstad (2003) was an attempt to throw light on apparent variability in regional convergence in relation to agriculture as a sector subject to powerful political measures, in Western Europe, 1989-1999. The present study takes up a number of points made in conclusion in that paper. Since it is possible that the non-stationarity found there is related to further missing variables, including the inadequacy of the way in which agricultural subsidies are represented, we a… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
(42 reference statements)
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“…This is potentially important in our context, since the variations in the exchange rate series may have influence on the values of the regional growth rates and the measure of volatility used in our econometric analysis. In order to investigate this issue, we have adopted an approach similar to that used by Bivand & Brunstad (2006). In particular, we have included in our baseline specification a dummy variable that allows us to identify regions in countries with high fluctuations in the exchange rate series over the study period.…”
Section: Robustness Checksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is potentially important in our context, since the variations in the exchange rate series may have influence on the values of the regional growth rates and the measure of volatility used in our econometric analysis. In order to investigate this issue, we have adopted an approach similar to that used by Bivand & Brunstad (2006). In particular, we have included in our baseline specification a dummy variable that allows us to identify regions in countries with high fluctuations in the exchange rate series over the study period.…”
Section: Robustness Checksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The technological regimes are interacted with the variables in the models to assess how the variables of interest behave in regions belonging to different regimes. The regressions for each of the technological regimes are estimated simultaneously, and the spatial coefficients are common and jointly estimated (Bivand and Brunstad 2006). In contrast to the first three models, the crosssectional fixed effects are replaced by the technological regime constants because both individual fixed effects and the regime variable are time invariant.…”
Section: Hypotheses and Econometric Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With respect to the spatial specification, we retain those identified in the previous paragraphs, as the data-generating process did not change. Instead of testing the spatial form of the models, we use a Chow-Wald test to determine whether the coefficients in the models with regimes are different from a simple "pooled" model (Bivand and Brunstad 2006). Model 4-Related variety and employment growth in a regime setting.…”
Section: Spatial Panel Models With Technological Regimesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, this is how macroeconomic convergence has been looked at in a wide number of studies at different levels: international Sala-i-Martin, 1992 andMankiw et al, 1992;, regional (Lopez-Bazo et al, 1999;Bivand and Brunstad, 2005) and even local (Royuela and Artís, 2006). Improving GDP has been shown to increase life expectancy, provide better access to basic education, etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%