《Residential segregation and preference misalignment》

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作者
来源
来源 JOURNAL OF URBAN ECONOMICS,Vol.55,P.587-609
语言
英文
关键字
Segregation;Tipping model;Neighborhood preferences;Multi-city study of urban inequality
作者单位
Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy, Duke University, Box 90245, Durham, NC 27708, USA"}]}]}],"floats":[],"footnotes":[],"affiliations":{"aep-affiliation-id2":{"#name":"affiliation","$":{"id":"aep-affiliation-id2;Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy, Duke University, Box 90245, Durham, NC 27708, USA"}]}},"attachments":[],"correspondences":{},"scopusAuthorIds":{},"articles":{}},"authorMetadata":[],"banner":{"expanded":false},"biographies":{},"body":{},"browser":{"name":"IE","engine":"Trident
摘要
This paper studies the role of disparities in neighborhood composition preferences in perpetuating residential segregation. Evidence from the Multi-city study of urban inequality (MCSUI) suggests that it would be impossible to simultaneously sort White, Black, Asian, and Hispanic households into neighborhoods that match their stated ideal. Simulations suggest that rearranging blocks in US metropolitan areas to match preferences stated by Black MCSUI respondents would involve moving 36% of the Black population to a block with a lower concentration of Black neighbors and 6% of the Black population to a block with a higher concentration of Black neighbors.