Communications Earth & Environment (Jun 2023)

Multidecadal dynamics project slow 21st-century economic growth and income convergence

  • Matthew G. Burgess,
  • Ryan E. Langendorf,
  • Jonathan D. Moyer,
  • Ashley Dancer,
  • Barry B. Hughes,
  • David Tilman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-023-00874-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Future economic growth will affect societal well-being and the environment, but is uncertain. We describe a multidecadal pattern of gross domestic product (GDP) per capita growth rising, then declining, as regions become richer. An empirically fitted differential-equation model and an integrated assessment model—International Futures—accounting for this pattern both predict 21st-century economic outlooks with slow growth and income convergence compared to the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways, similar to SSP4 (“Inequality”). For World Bank income groups, the differential-equation model could have produced, from 1980, consistent projections of 2100 GDP per capita, and more accurate predictions of 2010s growth rates than the International Monetary Fund’s short-term forecasts. Both forecasts were positively biased for the low-income group. SSP4 might therefore represent a best-case—not worst-case—scenario for 21st-century economic growth and income convergence. International Futures projects high poverty and population growth, and moderate energy demands and carbon dioxide emissions, within the Shared Socioeconomic Pathway range.