1 / 25

Sub-National Growth Dynamics: Insights from Macro-GDP and Micro-Survey Data Binayak Sen December 12, 2005

Sub-National Growth Dynamics: Insights from Macro-GDP and Micro-Survey Data Binayak Sen December 12, 2005. Motivation for the Paper. Some Stylized Facts Acceleration of Growth in the 1990s (and beyond) compared to 1980s Pronounced rise in inequality

xue
Télécharger la présentation

Sub-National Growth Dynamics: Insights from Macro-GDP and Micro-Survey Data Binayak Sen December 12, 2005

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sub-National Growth Dynamics: Insights from Macro-GDP and Micro-Survey Data Binayak Sen December 12, 2005

  2. Motivation for the Paper Some Stylized Facts • Acceleration of Growth in the 1990s (and beyond) compared to 1980s • Pronounced rise in inequality • Considerable progress in poverty, human development and social indicators • Weak sign of “social convergence”

  3. Motivation for the Paper (2) • What is the sub-national story underlying the growth dynamics? • How different are regional growth rates? • Has spatial inequality become sharper? • Any sign for “regional growth convergence”? • What lessons from sub-national data for future national growth? • Is there a role for “regional policy”?

  4. What is “sub-national” level? • Spatial differences across division (6), region (20 “old” districts), new district (64) • Data Source: macro-GDP by region; micro-expenditure by region and district; census information on district

  5. Considerable Regional Differences • Considerable regional concentration in income/ expenditure • Dhaka/ CTG Division—55-60% of total GDP and Survey Expenditure • Dhaka/ CTG Region—30% of total GDP and Survey Expenditure • Considerable regional variation in growth

  6. Regional Growth Differences

  7. Regional Growth Differences (2)

  8. Regional Growth Differences (3)

  9. What Explains the Regional Growth Variation? Possible Key Factors • Human Capital: +ve • Initial Income (Expenditure) Inequality: -ve • Urbanization: +ve • Agricultural Technology: +ve • Gender Inequality: -ve • Large Landholding: + or -?

  10. Human Capital and Growth

  11. Human Capital and Growth (2)

  12. Human Capital and Growth (3)

  13. Gender Inequality and Growth

  14. Gender Inequality and Growth (2)

  15. Initial Expenditure Inequality and Growth

  16. Large Landholding and Growth

  17. What Explains the Regional Growth Variation? (2) • Results of multivariate analysis confirmed the predictions • Regional growth convergence (both conditional and unconditional)—yes • However, (a) the “speed of convergence” is very slow, (b) the trend can change if “inequality” is not addressed

  18. Results of Multivariate Analysis

  19. What Matters Most: Within-Region or Between-Region Inequality? • Total inequality (i.e. inequality in inter-personal income) is mainly explained by within-region inequality • Sharp rise in within-region inequality; slight increase in between-region inequality • Consistency with regional growth convergence

  20. New Growth Agenda • Human capital requirements vary with stages of development: Confronting new challenges • Rethinking “new technology” in the phase of agricultural diversification

  21. New Growth Agenda (2) • Urban Futures: Putting “urban” on the growth agenda: • Tapping mega-city potentials • Changing fortunes of district towns • Understanding dynamics of “meso-economy”

  22. New Growth Agenda (3) • Initial income inequality depresses growth • Addressing new sources of income inequality: • Land vs. non-land sources

  23. New Growth Agenda (4) • Inclusion of “missing factors” for future analysis: • Infrastructure • Access to finance • Regional governance • Need for periodic regional data

More Related