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On the Impact of Public Housing on Income Segregation in France

Beaubrun-Diant, Kevin; Maury, Tristan-Pierre (2022), On the Impact of Public Housing on Income Segregation in France, Demography, 59, 2, p. 685–706. 10.1215/00703370-9807596

Type
Article accepté pour publication ou publié
External document link
https://www.jstor.org/stable/48687274
Date
2022
Journal name
Demography
Volume
59
Number
2
Publisher
Springer
Pages
685–706
Publication identifier
10.1215/00703370-9807596
Metadata
Show full item record
Author(s)
Beaubrun-Diant, Kevin
Laboratoire d'Economie de Dauphine [LEDa]
Maury, Tristan-Pierre
EDHEC Economics Research Centre
ESSEC Business School
Research Center on Economics
Abstract (EN)
This article provides a geographic analysis of the contribution of public housing to income segregation in France from 1999 to 2015. The analysis is conducted with several segregation indices and at different geographic scales. Surprisingly, it appears that while home tenure (public vs. private housing) segregation has been decreasing, income segregation has been rising. With segregation decomposition techniques, we provide evidence that this is partly due to an increasing concentration of low-income households in public housing, which cancels out the effect of the spatial dispersion of public housing. Indeed, while public housing has become more homogeneously distributed geographically, which should help to reduce income segregation, the distribution of income within public (and private) housing has changed: households living in public housing were poorer in 2015 than in 1999. We also provide evidence of a sorting effect—the process of allocating public housing that is not random—so that the richest neighborhoods or municipalities receive wealthier-than-average public tenants.
Subjects / Keywords
Income segregation; Public housing; Spatial decomposition; Poverty; Home tenure
JEL
I32 - Measurement and Analysis of Poverty
D31 - Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions
D63 - Equity, Justice, Inequality, and Other Normative Criteria and Measurement

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