No, if there is a 'lower degree' its not measureable. The fact is, you're not looking at true self emissive pixels, but at a canvas that's getting lit from the back. Wuuut you say? Yep...
This is the basis behind Samsung's implementation of OLED. They use a matrix/canvas'ey solution on top of a self emissive diode. Its the reason for all the properties those panels have. Is it inferior, not sure, but definitely closer in properties to a good ol' LCD than LG's OLED implementation and certainly cheaper to produce. With its pro's and cons. For gaming or PC use, Samsung's implementation is clearly inferior in ways: display of text is horrible (fringing/halo effects) because of the subpixel orientation, and latency is higher than on OLED because of, most likely, processing of the image. OTOH, its likely to degrade less quickly as there is only one color of OLED (blue), but we can't tell just yet.
LG OLED is a true self emissive, individual diode per pixel you're looking at, and Samsung's is not quite that. That's why the Samsung panels haven't got the same static contrast either; they specify 1M:1 static. LG specs for infinite:1 because it is pitch black, the pixel can turn 'off' entirely. The reason is likely some light leakage between diode and canvas on Samsung or not using a single diode per pixel, but rather some idea of local dimming zones; the exact reason LCD's can't do proper blacks. The quantum dot layer is that canvas.
But back to subject: PWM means modulated and it means there is not a truly constant voltage so there can be perceptible flicker, depending on your sensitivity, but it will never help with persistence blur because the interval is too high to create a noticeable lower brightness - there are no black frames in PWM modulated panels. That is, at first impression what BFI does: lower the brightness because you're really getting X frames per second but with black doubled frames in between, the result is, your eyes catch only half the light, or a bit more, and your brain interprets those black frames as a way to 'frame' moving images. Its simply a slideshow at high speed. PWM modulating does not create that effect at all.
This is also the reason BFI in (LG) OLED is never an issue wrt perceptible flicker. There is no 'black frame insertion', there are just pixels turning off. A black frame on LCD is not 'an off state', its brightness at 0%, which at best gets you a black level of 0.02 cd/m2 or something on the best VA's.