Density Zoning and Class Segregation in U.S. Metropolitan Areas

J. Rothwell, D. Massey
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引用次数: 130

Abstract

OBJECTIVES Socioeconomic segregation rose substantially in U.S. cities during the final decades of the 20th century, and we argue that zoning regulations are an important cause of this increase.Methods. We measure neighborhood economic segregation using the Gini coefficient for neighborhood income inequality and the poor-affluent exposure index. These outcomes are regressed on an index of density zoning developed from the work of Pendall for 50 U.S. metropolitan areas, while controlling for other metropolitan characteristics likely to affect urban housing markets and class segregation.Results. For both 2000 and changes from 1990 to 2000, OLS estimates reveal a strong relationship between density zoning and income segregation, and replication using 2SLS suggests that the relationship is causal. We also show that zoning is associated with higher interjurisdictional inequality.Conclusions. Metropolitan areas with suburbs that restrict the density of residential construction are more segregated on the basis of income than those with more permissive density zoning regimes. This arrangement perpetuates and exacerbates racial and class inequality in the United States.
美国大都市地区的人口密度分区和阶级隔离
目的:在20世纪最后几十年,美国城市的社会经济隔离程度大幅上升,我们认为分区法规是导致这种加剧的重要原因。我们使用社区收入不平等的基尼系数和贫穷-富裕暴露指数来衡量社区经济隔离。这些结果是根据Pendall对50个美国大都市地区的工作开发的密度分区指数进行回归的,同时控制了可能影响城市住房市场和阶级隔离的其他大都市特征。对于2000年和1990 - 2000年的变化,OLS估计显示密度分区和收入隔离之间存在很强的关系,使用2SLS的复制表明这种关系是因果关系。我们还表明,区域划分与更高的管辖区间不平等有关。拥有限制住宅建筑密度的郊区的大都市地区,在收入基础上比那些拥有更宽松的密度分区制度的地区更加隔离。这种安排延续并加剧了美国的种族和阶级不平等。
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