Religiosity and income: a panel cointegration and causality analysis: A Panel Cointegration and Causality Analysis

2017 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Religiosity and income: a panel cointegration and causality analysis: ​A Panel Cointegration and Causality Analysis​
Herzer, D. & Strulik, H. ​ (2017) 
Applied economics49(30) pp. 2922​-2938​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2016.1251562 

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Authors
Herzer, Dierk; Strulik, Holger 
Abstract
In this article, we examine the long-run relationship between religiosity and income using retrospective data on church attendance rates for a panel of countries from 1930 to 1990. We employ panel cointegration and causality techniques to control for omitted variable and endogeneity bias and test for the direction of causality. We show that there exists a negative long-run relationship between the level of religiosity, measured by church attendance, and the level of income, measured by the log of GDP per capita. The result is robust to alternative estimation methods, potential outliers, different samples, different measures of church attendance and alternative specifications of the income variable. Long-run causality runs in both directions, higher income leads to declining religiosity and declining religiosity leads to higher income.
Issue Date
2017
Status
published
Publisher
Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd
Journal
Applied economics 
ISSN
1466-4283; 0003-6846
Language
English

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