按租金负担及其主要驱动因素划分的美国大都市类型。

IF 2 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Mikhail Samarin, Madhuri Sharma
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于租金负担的学术研究,在住房负担能力下降这一更广泛的领域中,是一个讨论较少的话题,但仍然缺乏坚实的理论。本文试图通过发展美国大都市的类型来解决这一差距,该类型以其租金负担状况为中心,并作为建立理论的第一步。我们采用主成分和聚类分析来确定七种不同类型的大都市及其租金负担的潜在驱动因素。对这七种类型的研究表明,租金负担具有空间随机性,因为七种类型中的一些大都市并不局限于特定的地理位置。教育/医学、信息、艺术、娱乐和娱乐专业化程度较高的大都市租金负担较高,而铁锈地带的老大都市租金负担较低。有趣的是,新兴的新经济大都市也表现出较低的租金负担,这可能反映了更新住房和多样化经济基础的好处。最后,租金负担除了是住房需求/供应不匹配的结果外,也是收入潜力的一种表现,这些潜力受到当地劳动力市场和区域经济专业化的复杂影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A typology of U.S. metropolises by rent burden and its major drivers.

A typology of U.S. metropolises by rent burden and its major drivers.

A typology of U.S. metropolises by rent burden and its major drivers.

Scholarly work on rent burden, a rather scantily discussed topic within the broader realm of declining housing affordability, still lacks a firm theory. This article seeks to address this gap by developing a typology of U.S. metropolises which centers on their rent burden status and serves as an initial step toward theory building. We employ principal component and cluster analyses to identify seven distinct types of metropolises and their potential drivers of rent burden. An examination of these seven types suggests that rent burden has spatial randomness to it, since some metropolises in the seven types do not confine to specific geographies. Metropolises with pronounced specializations in education/medicine, information, and arts, recreation, and entertainment exhibit higher rent burden, whereas older Rust Belt metropolises have lower burden. Interestingly, emerging new-economy metropolises exhibit lower rent burden as well, likely reflecting the benefits of newer housing and a diverse economic base. Finally, rent burden, besides being an outcome of the housing demand/supply mismatch, is also a manifestation of income potentials that are affected in complex ways by local labor markets and regional economic specializations.

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来源期刊
GEOJOURNAL
GEOJOURNAL GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
7.40%
发文量
228
期刊介绍: Aims & ScopeGeoJournal is an international journal devoted to all branches of spatially integrated social sciences and humanities. This long standing journal is committed to publishing cutting-edge, innovative, original and timely research from around the world and across the whole spectrum of social sciences and humanities that have an explicit geographical/spatial component, in particular in GeoJournal’s six major areas:- Economic and Development Geography- Social and Political Geography- Cultural and Historical Geography- Health and Medical Geography- Environmental Geography and Sustainable Development - Legal/Ethical Geography and Policy In addition to research papers GeoJournal publishes reviews as well as shorter articles in the form of research notes, commentaries, and reports. Submissions should demonstrate original and substantive contributions to social science and humanities from a geographical perspective. Submissions on emerging new fields such as GeoEthics, Neogeography, Digital Humanities and other emerging topics are also welcome. GeoJournal’s focus makes the journal essential reading for human geographers working in these areas, as well as for researchers from other disciplines, such as sociology, economics, political science, demography, environmental studies, urban planning, history, and cultural studies. Last but not least, GeoJournal encourages feedbacks and discussions on articles published in the journal through letters to the editor. GeoJournal is published bi-monthly in February, April, June, August, October and December.
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