ECN741: Urban Economics Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NFPA Urban Fire Safety Project Urban Fire Forum October 21, 2011 Sharon Gamache Program Director High-Risk Outreach Programs.
Advertisements

Chapter 5 Urban Growth. Purpose This chapter explores the determinants of growth in urban income and employment.
© 2013 Empire Justice Center How Detailed Data Analysis Reveals the True Face of Suburban Poverty PART 2 September 26, 2013 Presented by: Michael L. Hanley.
Indianapolis-Carmel MSA
Housing Segregation and Spatial Mismatch Race and Ethnicity Population Trends and Policies.
William H. Frey The Brookings Institution April 23, 2013 America ’ s New Demography Rising Minorities, Aging Boomers and Emerging Cultural Gaps.
The Rise and Decline of the American Ghetto Written by David M. Cutler., Edward L. Glaeser., and Jacob L. Vigdor Journal of Political Economy 107 (3)
PPA786: Urban Policy Class 11: Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences.
Earning Inequality and Spatial Mismatch in Texas Shujuan Li Geog 406 Instructor: Dr. Bednarz.
Sales Force Management
The Boston Renaissance: Race, Space, and Economic Change in an American Metropolis -Barry Bluestone & Mary Huff Stevenson.
Changing Demographics in Texas
Job Accessibility and Racial Differences in Youth Employment Rates Keith R. Ihlanfeldt, David L. Sjoquist The American Economic Review Volume 80, Issue.
U.S. Urban Segregation. It Can’t be Created by Law... Processes & Conditions that support segregation –Self selection – choosing to live where people.
(c) Allen C. Goodman, 2006 Poverty O’S Chapter 14.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter 8 Neighborhood Choice.
John F. Kain Housing Segregation, Negro Employment, and Metropolitan Decentralization Quarterly Journal of Economics 82 (1968) Presentation by Aida K.
Introduction to Newark
Exam 1 results Mean: 71.5 Range: Mean (4.0): 3.3 Range (4.0): To convert your score: (Raw Score/85)*4.
Chapter 8 Neighborhood Choice McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Racial Segregation in urban-rural continuum: do patterns by geographical region? Racial Segregation in urban-rural continuum: do patterns vary by geographical.
Race And Housing Creating An American “Ghetto” What Is Segregation? How Segregated Are We? How Does Segregation Happen? What’s In A Name?
1 George Goodno Communications Director for State Policy, International Affairs and Intellectual Property BioForward 2014 Bioscience Vision Summit October.
December 11, 2007 Michael Morris, P.E., Director of Transportation North Central Texas Council.
Subtitle text can go here Economic Minute November 13, 2014 Director Seidman Research Institute.
© 2014 Graduate Management Admission Council® (GMAC®) All rights reserved. Graduate Management Education Trends 2014 Glenda Lucas | Market Development,
1. 2 The New Geography of Immigration and Local Policy Responses Brookings Mountain West University of Nevada Las Vegas March 9, 2010 Audrey Singer Senior.
The Changing Demographics of Texas and Their Impact on our Nonprofit Sector The Texas Nonprofit Summit September 20, 2012 Austin, Texas.
By: Anirban Basu Sage Policy Group, Inc. April 26, 2012 The Dog Ate My Home On Behalf of Commonwealth Business Travel Group.
Are the High Fliers Pricing Themselves out of the Market: The Impact of Housing Cost on Domestic Migration Rates in U.S. Metropolitan Areas Urban Affairs.
General Motors Factory Relocation Program By Yudi Jin JP Park By Yudi Jin JP Park.
Austin Chamber of Commerce 1207 State of the Economy Demographics As presented to the Keller Williams Agent Leadership Council.
William H. Frey The Brookings Institution & The University of Michigan A 30,000-Foot View of the Demographic Landscape.
2011 Concours d’Elegance and Motoring Festival Results Prepared by: John Salazar, Ph.D. University of South Carolina Beaufort January 16, 2012.
Urbanization and segregation. Where Americans lived, Size of place Total Under 1,000, or unincorporated place
Using GIS to Examine the Relationship Between Recreational vs. Utilitarian Walking and Bicycling Amy Zlot Richard Killingsworth Sandra Ham Muthukumar Subrahmanyam.
Global Research and Consulting Econometric Advisors CBRE Econometric Advisors Client Conference 2012 October 2, 2012 Global Research and Consulting Econometric.
Professor: Keren Mertens Horn Office: Wheatley 5-78B Office Hours: TR 2:30-4:00 pm ECONOMICS OF THE METROPOLITAN AREA 212G,
Texas Demographic Characteristics and Trends Texas State University School Relations Retreat December 17, 2012 San Marcos, Texas.
GDP-by-Metropolitan Area Statistics Accelerated Release of Data for 2008 Sharon D. Panek Association of Public Data Users Online December 10,
Chapter 11 The Urban Transition.
1 The High Cost of Segregation Exploring Racial Disparities in High Cost Lending Vicki Been, Ingrid Ellen, Josiah Madar, Johanna Lacoe Urban Affairs Association.
WHY SEGREGATION?. Patterns of Segregation in Los Angeles Income Segregation –Map of median income –Map with % earning over 100,000 –Map with % earning.
Residential Segregation Dimensions, Facts, and Potential Solutions (with thanks to the Lewis Mumford Center, SUNY- Albany)
Suzanne Isaacs Office of Outreach and Capacity Building.
Residential Location David Levinson. Push and Pull Pull - advantages of locating near specific things Push - disadvantages of locating near specific things.
United States Demographics Mr. Hyke AHS. The present population of the United States is 310 million people.
1 Dallas-Fort Worth Leads Metro Areas in Numerical Growth U.S. Census Bureau
Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
Texas Demographic Characteristics and Trends 2013 Texas Leadership Forum February 1, 2013 Austin, Texas.
US Demographics in the New Century: Diversity but not a Melting Pot William H. Frey Milken Institute & University of Michigan
PAI786: Urban Policy Class 11: Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences.
Population Growth and Diversification in the South: Implications for Education, the Labor Force and Economic Development Hobby Center for the Study of.
Rodney Fort's Sports Economics
Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
Economics of Sports Unit 2  Economics.
Economics of Sports Bob Donchez
Measuring Segregation in Boston
Economics of Sports Unit 2  Economics.
Economics of Sports Unit 2  Economics.
Let’s look at some Maps!.
New Orleans Hospitality Outlook
Economics of Sports Unit 2  Economics.
Tract > 75% White Tract > 75% Black Tract > 25% Hispanic Tract > 25% White and > 25% Black Tract has other racial composition.
Current conditions.
Class 11: Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
Economics of Sports Unit 2  Economics.
Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
Class 11: Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences
Presentation transcript:

ECN741: Urban Economics Residential Segregation: Measurement, Causes, Consequences

Residential Segregation Class Outline ▫Measurement of Segregation ▫Causes of Segregation ▫Consequences of Segregation

Residential Segregation Definition of Segregation ▫Segregation is the physical separation of different groups = a synonym for sorting. ▫We focus on racial and ethnic residential segregation, but many other kinds of segregation exist (in schools, firms, occupations, etc.). ▫Segregation is a complex social phenomenon, with many different dimensions.

Residential Segregation Measures of Segregation ▫Dissimilarity Index: Evenness of segregation ▫Isolation Index: Potential contact between groups ▫Delta Index: Relative physical space occupied ▫Centralization Index: Degree to which a group lives near the CBD ▫Proximity Index: Degree to which a group lives in contiguous areas

Residential Segregation The Dissimilarity Index ▫The dissimilarity index, D, is the most common measure of discrimination. ▫It indicates the share of either group that would have to move to reach an even distribution. ▫Its formula is:

Residential Segregation Black-White Segregation ▫In the case of black-white segregation, over the last 40 years we have seen declines in segregation measured by  Dissimilarity Index  Isolation Index ▫And little change in segregation (up to 2000) using  Delta Index  Centralization Index  Proximity Index

Residential Segregation Segregation Indexes for Blacks Source: Glaeser/Vigdor

Residential Segregation Segregation Indexes for Blacks Source: Glaeser/Vigdor

Residential Segregation Glaeser/Vigdor based on census tracts; Frey based on census block-groups. Black-White Dissimilarity Indexes for Nation's Largest Metro Areas Glaeser/VigdorFrey New York Los Angeles Chicago Dallas-Ft. Worth Philadelphia Houston Washington, D.C Miami Atlanta Boston Average

Residential Segregation Most Segregated Areas for Blacks Source: Frey, Population Studies Center, University of Michigan Rank (2010)Name Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL-IN-WI Detroit-Warren-Livonia, MI Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH Buffalo-Niagara Falls, NY St. Louis, MO-IL Cincinnati-Middletown, OH-KY-IN Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA Syracuse, NY Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, CT Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, OH-PA Dayton, OH Indianapolis-Carmel, IN Birmingham-Hoover, AL Pittsburgh, PA Harrisburg-Carlisle, PA Baltimore-Towson, MD Toledo, OH

Residential Segregation Perspective on Black-White Segregation ▫Comparisons with 1900 are misleading; social segregation did not require residential segregation back then.  As late as the 1960s, many southern cities had low segregation indexes because black workers in white homes lived close by. ▫Cities with large black populations have seen relatively little decline in segregation. ▫Black-white segregation is still much greater than Hispanic/non-Hispanic or Asian-white segregation.

Residential Segregation Hispanic/Non-Hispanic-White Segregation ▫In the case of Hispanic-white segregation, the decades preceding 2000 saw increases in segregation measured by  Dissimilarity Index  Isolation Index ▫And little change in segregation using  Delta Index  Centralization Index  Proximity Index

Residential Segregation Dissimilarity Index for Hispanics (Frey) Hispanic/non-Hispanic-white Dissimilarity Indexes, 10 Largest Metropolitan Areas, New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL-IN-WI Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH Syracuse, NY Average (102 Areas with Population > 500,000)

Residential Segregation Dissimilarity Index for Asians (Frey) Asian-White Dissimilarity Indexes for the 10 Largest Metropolitan Areas, New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL-IN-WI Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, FL Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH Syracuse, NY Average (102 Areas with Population > 500,000)

Residential Segregation Causes of Segregation ▫Discrimination ▫Preferences (which are based on experiences) ▫Income differences (which reflect past and current discrimination)

Residential Segregation Causes of Segregation: Discrimination ▫Discrimination obviously can contribute to segregation. ▫Specifically, segregation is reinforced by  Denial of information about available housing,  Racial/ethnic steering,  Lack of cooperation in completing transactions.

Residential Segregation Causes of Segregation: Attitudes ▫An excellent article by Ihlanfeldt and Scafidi (Housing Studies, 2004; data from Atlanta, Boston, and LA) examines the simultaneity between racial attitudes and racial segregation.  Whites’ neighborhood racial preferences play an important role in explaining the racial composition of their neighborhoods.  Inter-racial contact in neighborhoods and workplaces leads to a greater willingness among whites to live with blacks.

Residential Segregation Causes of Segregation: Income ▫Income sorting and segregation  The basic logic of income-taste sorting suggests that socio-economic differences between groups will contribute to residential segregation. ▫A recent study of the San Francisco area (Bayer, MacMillan, Rueben, JUE, 2004) finds that education, income, language, and immigration status, explain  Almost 95% of segregation for Hispanic households  Over 50% of segregation Asian households, and  Only 30% of segregation for Black households.

Residential Segregation Consequences of Segregation: ▫Differences in opportunities. ▫Persistence of stereotypes and prejudice. ▫Segregation is an outcome that becomes a cause!

Residential Segregation Segregation and Opportunities ▫Spatial Mismatch Hypothesis  Kain, QJE, 1868: High unemployment among blacks is due to mismatch between their residences and location of jobs—and to factors maintaining segregation.  Some evidence to support this (more jobs nearby = lower unemployment for blacks).  But recent evidence indicates that having more jobs held by whites nearby does not lower black unemployment (Hellerstein, Neumark, and McInerney, JUE, 2008)—a sign of discrimination in labor markets.

Residential Segregation Segregation and Opportunities, Cont. ▫Another approach is to determine whether blacks have poorer socio-economic outcomes in urban areas with higher levels of segregation (Cutler and Glaeser, QJE, 1997). ▫Higher segregation leads to larger white- black gaps in employment, earnings, not being a single mother, and high-school graduation. ▫A one-standard deviation decrease in segregation would cut the black-white gap on most outcomes by one-third.

Residential Segregation Segregation and Prejudice ▫Remember the evidence from Ihlanfeldt and Scafidi:  Inter-racial contact in neighborhoods and workplaces leads to a greater willingness among whites to live with blacks.  It follows that a lack of contact undermines the willingness of whites to live with blacks.