To read this content please select one of the options below:

Dynamics of national development and regional disparity: evidence from 184 countries

Vivek Jadhav (Madras School of Economics, Chennai, India)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 30 August 2022

Issue publication date: 13 July 2023

113

Abstract

Purpose

The existence of the regional Kuznets curve, i.e. an inverted U-shaped relationship between regional disparity and economic development is widely debated and discussed. The bell-shaped curve of the spatial growth process where during the initial phase inequality increases and then reduces is theoretically supported by Myrdal (1957), Hirschman (1958), and Williamson (1965). It becomes important to understand regional Kuznets curve globally. Understanding the relationship between regional disparity and economic development becomes essential for public policy for balanced regional growth.

Design/methodology/approach

Regional Kuznets Curve which is an inverted U-shaped relationship between regional disparity and economic development is not a new phenomenon. Theoretical framework by Myrdal (1957), Hirschman (1958), and Williamson (1965) support the an inverted U-shaped relationship. To understand the relationship between regional disparity and economic development, the authors investigate the regional Kuznets curve by using data for 184 countries and 1765 subnational regions. Using parametric, semi-parametric, and non-parametric, it is found that there exists an inverted U-shaped relationship between regional disparity and economic development. The presence of the regional Kuznets curve is observed. As the theoretical framework suggests, regional inequality increases with income initially and decreases after attaining a certain level of income. This study identifies two stages of divergence-convergence where in the first stage, divergence across regions in a country happens with increasing income and in the later stage, convergence across regions in a country occurs with increasing income.

Findings

Using the parametric approach (panel data analysis), semi-parametric and non-parametric approaches, it is found that there exists a regional Kuznets curve. It is found that there exists an inverted-U relationship between regional inequality and per capita GNI. This suggests that the divergence-convergence passes through two stages. In the first stage, divergence across regions in a country happens with increasing income while in the later stage convergence occurs.

Originality/value

This research work has done three important things which fill the research gap that exists in the literature: (1) constructing the Gini coefficient to measure the regional inequality for 184 countries using 1765 subnational regional data; (2) using a parametric approach (panel data analysis) to understand the regional Kuznets phenomenon and (3) using a semi-parametric approach and non-parametric approach to understand the regional Kuznets phenomenon.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Data availability: In the interest of transparency, data sharing, and reproducibility, the author(s) of this article have made the data underlying their research openly available. It can be accessed by following the link here: Dataset: https://globaldatalab.org/ https://data.worldbank.org/

Software: stata- https://www.stata.com/

Citation

Jadhav, V. (2023), "Dynamics of national development and regional disparity: evidence from 184 countries", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 50 No. 5, pp. 1048-1062. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-02-2022-0080

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles