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What is s- Convergence

Handbook of Research on Global Indicators of Economic and Political Convergence
In the field of environmental economics, s-convergence holds when the dispersion in environmental indicators diminishes over time. Barro and Sala-i Martin show that s-convergence is a necessary but not sufficient condition for the cross-section variance to decrease over time. It should be noted that s-convergence may fail to capture polarization phenomena in case of tendencies toward multimodality.
Published in Chapter:
A Comparative Study on World-Wide Carbon Emission Convergence: An Empirical Analysis
Chhanda Mandal (Muralidhar Girls College, India) and Anita Chattopadhyay Gupta (Deshbandhu College for Girls, India)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-0215-9.ch019
Abstract
Environmental issue is one of the primary concerns in present global scenario for developed as well as developing countries and reducing the emission level of greenhouse gases is the common objective for all. Study of per capita carbon emission convergence is quite significant in the ongoing debate of climate change policy formulation and implementation as future emission level can only decide the incentive to shift to the clean technology. With a balanced panel of 79 countries and 50 years, over 1960-2009, we have tested for both sigma and beta convergence. The data exhibits a possible convergence in carbon emission. The countries are disaggregated twice, first into OECD and Non-OECD countries and then into five categories on the basis of income. OECD countries show absolute and conditional beta convergence, also with sigma convergence. Countries from lower income group have a lower degree of variability in dispersion in the time period being considered. The set of explanatory variables in this analysis are real GDP per capita, population growth rate and trade openness.
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