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Temperature and Income: Reconciling New Cross-Sectional and Panel Estimates

Author(s)
Dell, Melissa Lynne; Jones, Benjamin F.; Olken, Benjamin A.
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Abstract
It has long been observed that hot countries tend to be poor. A correlation between heat and poverty was noted as early as Charles de Montesquieu (1750) and Ellsworth Huntington (1915), and it has been repeatedly demonstrated in contemporary data (e.g., William D. Nordhaus 2006). Looking at a cross section of the world in the year 2000, national income per capita falls 8.5 percent per degree Celsius rise in temperature (see Table 2 below). In fact, temperature alone can explain 23 percent of the variation in cross-country income today.
Date issued
2009-05
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/61740
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics
Journal
American Economic Review
Publisher
American Economic Association
Citation
Dell, Melissa, Benjamin F. Jones, and Benjamin A. Olken. 2009. "Temperature and Income: Reconciling New Cross-Sectional and Panel Estimates." American Economic Review, 99(2): 198–204. © 2009 American Economic Association.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0002-8282
1944-7981

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