"Research by the University of Washington’s Richard Morrill shows that suburban areas tend to have “generally less inequality” than the denser cities with activity centralized in the core; for example, in California, Riverside-San Bernardino is far less unequal than Los Angeles, and Sacramento less than San Francisco. Within the 51 metropolitan areas with more than 1 million in population, notes demographer Wendell Cox, suburban areas were less unequal (measured by the Gini coefficient) than the core cities in 46 cases."
::: DOWNLOAD Kotkin, J., Cox, W., Schill, M., Modarres, A. (2015) Building Cities for People, Chapman University, Center for Demographics and Policy, 90 pages
- - - - - - - - - -
Photograph (Los Angeles) via Wikipedia
No comments:
Post a Comment