Urban Inequality Revisited
- 1 July 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Affairs Review
- Vol. 31 (6) , 759-777
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107808749603100604
Abstract
Urban size and growth rates have been the focus in the analysis of variation in income inequality among U.S. metropolises. Here, the author builds upon elements identified in the literature to examine 1990 census data for the total, white, and black populations. The regression results indicate that the causal structure of inequality has changed and that the determinants of intraracial inequality are different. The author argues that now the most significant determinants relate to local employment, and social and demographic conditions, reflecting a fundamental transformation from the importance of income level, industry mix, and race.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Close Together and Worlds Apart: An Analysis of Changes in the Ecology of Income in Canadian CitiesUrban Studies, 1993
- Revisiting Metropolitan Racial Inequality: The Case for a Resource ApproachSocial Forces, 1990
- Metropolitan Earnings Inequality and Service Sector EmploymentSocial Forces, 1988
- The Impact of Industrial and Occupational Structure on Black-White Employment AllocationAmerican Sociological Review, 1986
- Declining city productivity and the growth of rural regions: A test of alternative explanationsJournal of Urban Economics, 1985
- Income Distribution, City Size and Urban Growth: the Final ReplyUrban Studies, 1982
- Income Distribution, City Size and Urban Growth: a Final Re-examinationUrban Studies, 1982
- Income Inequality and City Size: An Examination of Alternative Hypotheses for Large and Small CitiesThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1980
- THE SIZE DISTRIBUTION OF FAMILY INCOME IN U.S. SMSAs, 1959*Review of Income and Wealth, 1975
- The City as a System Generating Income EqualitySocial Forces, 1972