In this paper convergence in per capita incomes (personal and disposable) in US states over 1929-2005 is revisited using the notion of relative stochastic convergence and stationarity tests for panel data. According to the results, although the dispersion of per capita income be-came stationary by the early 1960s a large proportion of states have not converged to the na-tional average. The presence of diverging states indicates that a long-run (steady-state) distri-bution in relative incomes has not yet been attained, something which contrasts sharply with the findings of earlier empirical studies on the topic
State personal income per capita estimates at six census years are adjusted for state differences in...
The purpose of this investigation is to determine if popular convergence models that have been appli...
Existing literature on convergence largely ignores the effect of aggregate fluctuations on the evolu...
In this paper convergence in per capita incomes (personal and disposable) in US states over 1929-200...
Abstract. We perform convergence tests on the U.S. states for per capita income from 1930 to 2009. C...
This paper presents methods to analyze convergence in cross-sectional data collected over time using...
This paper examines the long-run trends in per-capita income across the US states (1995–2018). Contr...
In recent years a number of studies has examined the potential stochastic convergence of incomes in ...
When regional disparities follow a cyclical short-run pattern, convergence analysis results can be s...
Most economists conclude that the U.S. regions have converged in per capita earnings during a majori...
In this paper I apply the nonparametric methods proposed by Quah to data on US state relative income...
Most economists conclude that the U.S. regions have converged in per capita earnings during a majori...
This study examines regional convergence in per capita personal income in the US and Canada. We find...
This paper uses newly available long-span data on real per capita incomes from 1900-2001 to test for...
[[abstract]]This paper empirically tests for convergence in income inequality using a large panel of...
State personal income per capita estimates at six census years are adjusted for state differences in...
The purpose of this investigation is to determine if popular convergence models that have been appli...
Existing literature on convergence largely ignores the effect of aggregate fluctuations on the evolu...
In this paper convergence in per capita incomes (personal and disposable) in US states over 1929-200...
Abstract. We perform convergence tests on the U.S. states for per capita income from 1930 to 2009. C...
This paper presents methods to analyze convergence in cross-sectional data collected over time using...
This paper examines the long-run trends in per-capita income across the US states (1995–2018). Contr...
In recent years a number of studies has examined the potential stochastic convergence of incomes in ...
When regional disparities follow a cyclical short-run pattern, convergence analysis results can be s...
Most economists conclude that the U.S. regions have converged in per capita earnings during a majori...
In this paper I apply the nonparametric methods proposed by Quah to data on US state relative income...
Most economists conclude that the U.S. regions have converged in per capita earnings during a majori...
This study examines regional convergence in per capita personal income in the US and Canada. We find...
This paper uses newly available long-span data on real per capita incomes from 1900-2001 to test for...
[[abstract]]This paper empirically tests for convergence in income inequality using a large panel of...
State personal income per capita estimates at six census years are adjusted for state differences in...
The purpose of this investigation is to determine if popular convergence models that have been appli...
Existing literature on convergence largely ignores the effect of aggregate fluctuations on the evolu...