| |
| »Title
of chapter |
Urban
Poverty in Developed Countries |
| »Author |
A.
Brandolini, P. Cipollone |
| »Pages |
309-343 |
| »Title
of Book |
Inequality,
Welfare and Poverty: Theory and Measurement, Volume 9 |
| »Editors |
Y.
Amiel, J. A. Bishop |
| »Publisher |
Elsevier
Science |
| »Web
site |
|
| »ISBN |
0-7623-1014-6,
2003 |
| »Abstract |
In
this chapter we investigate the urban/rural dimension of poverty
in developed countries. We provide original estimates for Italy,
we gather published statistics for France and the United States,
and we produce novel cross-country estimates from the LIS database.
We show that the size of urban poverty depends on where the
boundaries of metropolitan districts are drawn and we observe
that overlooking geographical differences in the cost of living
is a particularly relevant hypothesis. We find that in France
and the United States post-war economic growth and urbanisation
were accompanied by a substantial reduction of the poverty risk
for the rural population, while poverty rates improved less,
or even sometimes deteriorated, for the urban population. The
lack of a standard definition of urban/rural area precludes
a rigorous comparative study. Our results indicate, however,
that only in few countries (Denmark, the United Kingdom and
the United States) the greatest poverty rates are found in central
cities, while in all other developed countries poor persons
are still relatively more frequent in rural areas. This pattern
is stronger in the four non-developed economies examined here. |
|
|
|