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Measuring Economic Growth from Outer Space

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TLDR
A statistical framework is developed that uses satellite data on lights growth to augment existing income growth measures, under the assumption that measurement error in using observed light as an indicator of income is uncorrelated with measurementerror in national income accounts.
Abstract
GDP growth is often measured poorly for countries and rarely measured at all for cities or subnational regions. We propose a readily available proxy: satellite data on lights at night. We develop a statistical framework that uses lights growth to augment existing income growth measures, under the assumption that measurement error in using observed light as an indicator of income is uncorrelated with measurement error in national income accounts. For countries with good national income accounts data, information on growth of lights is of marginal value in estimating the true growth rate of income, while for countries with the worst national income accounts, the optimal estimate of true income growth is a composite with roughly equal weights. Among poor-data countries, our new estimate of average annual growth differs by as much as 3 percentage points from official data. Lights data also allow for measurement of income growth in sub- and supranational regions. As an application, we examine growth in Sub Saharan African regions over the last 17 years. We find that real incomes in non-coastal areas have grown faster by 1/3 of an annual percentage point than coastal areas; non-malarial areas have grown faster than malarial ones by 1/3 to 2/3 annual percent points; and primate city regions have grown no faster than hinterland areas. Such applications point toward a research program in which "empirical growth" need no longer be synonymous with "national income accounts."

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Journal ArticleDOI

The chosen fortunate in the urbanization process in China? Evidence from a geographic regression discontinuity study

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors used grid-level nighttime light data and a border-based regression discontinuity design framework to find that the average effect of the "county-to-district" policy on nighttime light growth is significant and positive.
Book ChapterDOI

Using Nighttime Lights Data as a Proxy in Social Scientific Research

TL;DR: This chapter concludes that both the proposed methodology and nighttime lights data holds great potential for social scientific research where data availability and quality of data at smaller scales have proven a hindrance in past research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring economic growth using production possibility frontier under Harrod neutrality

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Oil at work: natural resource effects on household well-being in Ghana

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Posted Content

Illuminating Indigenous Economic Development

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed using nighttime light density measured by satellites as an alternative indicator of well-being, and showed that using such density is an effective proxy for per capita income.
References
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Posted Content

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined why rural-urban labor migration persists and is even increasing in many developing nations despite the existence of positive marginal products in agriculture and significant levels of urban unemployment, and concluded that in the absence of wage flexibility an optimal policy would include both partial wage subsidies or direct government employment and measures to restrict free migration.
Book

The Spatial Economy: Cities, Regions, and International Trade

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a method to improve the quality of the data collected by the data collection system by using the information gathered from the data set of the user's profile.
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