What Can We Learn from Nighttime Lights for Small Geographies? Measurement Errors and Heterogeneous Elasticities

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dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/15504
dc.identifier.uri https://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/15625
dc.contributor.author Bluhm, Richard
dc.contributor.author McCord, Gordon C.
dc.date.accessioned 2023-11-24T05:59:40Z
dc.date.available 2023-11-24T05:59:40Z
dc.date.issued 2022
dc.identifier.citation Bluhm, R.; McCord, G.C.: What Can We Learn from Nighttime Lights for Small Geographies? Measurement Errors and Heterogeneous Elasticities. In: Remote Sensing 14 (2022), Nr. 5, 1190. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14051190
dc.description.abstract Nighttime lights are routinely used as a proxy for economic activity when official statistics are unavailable and are increasingly applied to study the effects of shocks or policy interventions at small geographic scales. The implicit assumption is that the ability of nighttime lights to pick up changes in GDP does not depend on local characteristics of the region under investigation or the scale of aggregation. This study uses panel data on regional GDP growth from six countries, and nighttime lights from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) to investigate potential nonlinearities and measurement errors in the light production function. Our results for high statistical capacity countries (the United States and Germany) show that nightlights are significantly less responsive to changes in GDP at higher baseline level of GDP, higher population densities, and for agricultural GDP. We provide evidence that these nonlinearities are too large to be caused by differences in measurement errors across regions. We find similar but noisier relationships in other high-income countries (Italy and Spain) and emerging economies (Brazil and China). We also present results for different aggregation schemes and find that the overall relationship, including the nonlinearity, is stable across regions of different shapes and sizes but becomes noisier when regions become few and large. These findings have important implications for studies using nighttime lights to evaluate the economic effects of shocks or policy interventions. On average, nighttime lights pick up changes in GDP across many different levels of aggregation, down to relatively small geographies. However, the nonlinearity we document in this paper implies that some studies may fail to detect policy-relevant effects in places where lights react little to changes in economic activity or they may mistakenly attribute this heterogeneity to the treatment effect of their independent variable of interest. eng
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher Basel : MDPI
dc.relation.ispartofseries Remote Sensing 14 (2022), Nr. 5
dc.rights CC BY 4.0 Unported
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
dc.subject Aggregation eng
dc.subject GDP eng
dc.subject MAUP eng
dc.subject Nighttime lights eng
dc.subject Nonlinearity eng
dc.subject Panel data eng
dc.subject.ddc 620 | Ingenieurwissenschaften und Maschinenbau
dc.title What Can We Learn from Nighttime Lights for Small Geographies? Measurement Errors and Heterogeneous Elasticities eng
dc.type Article
dc.type Text
dc.relation.essn 2072-4292
dc.relation.doi https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14051190
dc.bibliographicCitation.issue 5
dc.bibliographicCitation.volume 14
dc.bibliographicCitation.firstPage 1190
dc.description.version publishedVersion
tib.accessRights frei zug�nglich


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