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Regional Inequalities in Small Countries Determinants and Measurement

2. Research questions:. Can we expect small countries to have smaller regional disparities?What are the main factors affecting the extent of regional disparities in small countries?Lastly, do small countries require specific inequality measurement, as opposed to their larger counterparts?. 3. Popu

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Regional Inequalities in Small Countries Determinants and Measurement

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    1. 5/17/2005 Annual Conference of Israel Regional Science Association – June 21st, 2005, Haifa University 1 Regional Inequalities in Small Countries – Determinants and Measurement Boris A. Portnov* & Daniel Felsenstein** * Haifa University; **Hebrew University of Jerusalem

    2. 2 Research questions: Can we expect small countries to have smaller regional disparities? What are the main factors affecting the extent of regional disparities in small countries? Lastly, do small countries require specific inequality measurement, as opposed to their larger counterparts?

    3. 3 Popular belief “small states … succeeded in spreading the fruits of economic growth more widely ... than the larger states at comparable levels of income per capita”

    4. 4 “…in small developed countries there seems to be less inequality in income distribution than in large ones” (Streeten, 1993) “…if inequality between regions in a country is a major source of inequality between households, then one would expect large countries to have greater regional diversity and hence higher levels of inequality” (Perkins and Syrquin, 1989)

    5. 5 Regional growth theories Neo-classical growth theory (NGT): competitive forces and interregional migration equalize differences and factor prices across regions and lead to more even regional development, specifically in a small country (CONVERGENCE); New economic geography (NEG): the uneven concentration of production is sustained by circular production linkages and may become increasingly entrenched over time (DIVERGENCE).

    6. 6 Empirical evidence Much of the evidence, in both directions, is based on large countries such as the U.S.A. and U.K. or areas within a supra-national economy such as the EU (Armstrong 1995, Le Gallo and Ertur 2003, Tsionas 2000 etc)

    7. 7 Defining a Country as Small Population Land area Economy (problematic)

    8. 8 Rank-size distribution of countries

    9. 9 Attributes of small countries Limited natural resources Small variation of climatic conditions and agricultural productivity High population density Openness to the global economy Centralized governmental structure Short distances Small Number of Regions Small Size of Regions

    10. 10 Limited natural resources

    11. 11 High population density

    12. 12 Openness to the global economy

    13. 13 Centralized governmental structure

    14. 14 Short distances

    15. 15 Preliminary conclusion There is no reason to expect a priory that small countries may exhibit smaller regional disparities than their larger counterparts. Depending on the local setting (e.g., agglomeration economies, openness to external trade, government structure, and practicability of daily commuting), the outcome of regional development may be indeterminate, leading in either direction - both towards regional divergence and convergence.

    16. 16 Empirical test Dependent variables - the population weighted coefficient of variation of regional GDPpc, or Williamson Index (WI) and ratio of regional GDPpc (max/min); Explanatory variables - Land area in 1,000 km2 (Land); GDPpc, $1000 US in PPS terms (GDP); the coefficient of variation of the population sizes of a country's regions (Pop_Distrib); population size of a country, million residents (Pop); : a country-size dummy (1 for a small country, and 0 otherwise (Smallness); Sample – 22 European countries of different size (NUTS II regions or their equivalents)

    17. 17 Country list

    18. 18 Models

    19. 19 Conclusion In general, the analysis supports our initial assumption that small countries do not necessarily have smaller regional gaps than their larger counterparts. To the contrary, smallness (i.e. the combination of small population size and small land area) tends to result, ceteris paribus, in larger regional gaps.

    20. 20 Measurement issues The commonly used inequality indices (WI, GINI, etc.) are abstract mathematical formulas. Therefore, one can assume that they can be applied to both large and small countries alike. Is this assumption correct?

    21. 21 Characteristic features of small countries: Smaller number of regions than a large and more populous nation (e.g., 47 prefectures in Japan vs. 6 districts in Israel); Varying population sizes of regions (small countries are often mono-centric with a clearly emphasized urban core); Possibility of rapid change in the parameter distribution

    22. 22 Testing

    23. 23 Measurement Indices Coefficient of variation (CV) (unweighted) Population weighted coefficient of variation (Williamson index (WI)) Theil index (TE(0)) Atkinson index (AT) Hoover coefficient (HC) Coulter coefficient (CC) Gini (U) (unweighted) Gini (W) (population weighted)

    24. 24 Test results

    25. 25 Permutation test (unrestricted)

    26. 26 Permutation test (restricted)

    27. 27 Conclusions First, it is likely to have a relatively small number of regional divisions. Second, its regional divisions are likely to vary considerably in their population sizes. Lastly, regions of a small country may rapidly change rank-order positions in the country-wide hierarchy, by changing their attributes (e.g., population and incomes).

    28. 28 In order to formalize these distinctions, we designed a number of simple empirical tests, in which income and population distributions, presumably characteristic for small countries, were compared with the “reference” distribution, assumed to fit better a country of a larger size. In the latter (reference) distribution, the population was distributed evenly across regional divisions and assumed to be static.

    29. 29 Somewhat surprisingly, none of the indices we tested appeared to pass all the tests, meaning that they may produce (at least theoretically) misleading estimates if used for small countries and compared to countries of bigger size. Although further studies on the performance of different inequality indices may be needed to verify the generality of our observations, the present analysis clearly cautions against indiscriminate use of inequality indices for regional analysis and comparison.

    30. 30 Catch-22 There are big and small countries: Small countries are like big countries, but smaller; Everything is small in small countries, but inequalities…

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