Galton's fallacy and tests of the convergence hypothesis

Quah, D. (1993). Galton's fallacy and tests of the convergence hypothesis. (Econometrics; EM/1993/265 EM/1993/265). Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
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Recent tests for the convergence hypothesis derive from regressing average growth rates on initial levels: a negative initial coefficient is interpreted as convergence. These tests turn out to be plagued by Galton's classical fallacy of regression towards the mean. Using a dynamic version of Galton's fallacy, I establish that coefficients of arbitrary signs in such regressions are consistent with an unchanging cross-section distribution of incomes. Alternative, more direct empirics used here show a tendency for divergence, rather than convergence, of cross-country incomes.

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