Zipf rank approach and cross-country convergence of incomes

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Published 4 May 2011 Europhysics Letters Association
, , Citation Jia Shao et al 2011 EPL 94 48001 DOI 10.1209/0295-5075/94/48001

0295-5075/94/4/48001

Abstract

We employ a concept popular in physics —the Zipf rank approach— in order to estimate the number of years that EU members would need in order to achieve "convergence" of their per capita incomes. Assuming that trends in the past twenty years continue to hold in the future, we find that after t≈30 years both developing and developed EU countries indexed by i will have comparable values of their per capita gross domestic product . Besides the traditional Zipf rank approach we also propose a weighted Zipf rank method. In contrast to the EU block, on the world level the Zipf rank approach shows that, between 1960 and 2009, cross-country income differences increased over time. For a brief period during the 2007–2008 global economic crisis, at world level the of richer countries declined more rapidly than the of poorer countries, in contrast to EU where the of developing EU countries declined faster than the of developed EU countries, indicating that the recession interrupted the convergence between EU members. We propose a simple model of GDP evolution that accounts for the scaling we observe in the data.

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10.1209/0295-5075/94/48001