4.6 Article

Scaling of urban income inequality in the USA

期刊

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2021.0223

关键词

scaling laws; urban scaling; power laws; urban inequality; income inequality

资金

  1. CAF Canada
  2. NSF REU [1757923]
  3. ASU-SFI Center for Biosocial Complex Systems
  4. Omidyar fellowship
  5. NSF [PHY1838420]
  6. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr
  7. Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure (OAC) [1757923] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Urban scaling analysis explores common features and income inequality across cities, showing that income in the least wealthy decile scales linearly with city population while income in the most wealthy decile scales superlinearly. Larger cities have increasingly unequally distributed benefits. The shapes of income distributions also change with city size, with mean, variance, skewness, and kurtosis increasing. This study suggests that interactions within cities leading to superlinear scaling may only be seen in upper deciles, encouraging further exploration of heterogeneous models.
Urban scaling analysis, the study of how aggregated urban features vary with the population of an urban area, provides a promising framework for discovering commonalities across cities and uncovering dynamics shared by cities across time and space. Here, we use the urban scaling framework to study an important, but under-explored feature in this community-income inequality. We propose a new method to study the scaling of income distributions by analysing total income scaling in population percentiles. We show that income in the least wealthy decile (10%) scales close to linearly with city population, while income in the most wealthy decile scale with a significantly superlinear exponent. In contrast to the superlinear scaling of total income with city population, this decile scaling illustrates that the benefits of larger cities are increasingly unequally distributed. For the poorest income deciles, cities have no positive effect over the null expectation of a linear increase. We repeat our analysis after adjusting income by housing cost, and find similar results. We then further analyse the shapes of income distributions. First, we find that mean, variance, skewness and kurtosis of income distributions all increase with city size. Second, the Kullback-Leibler divergence between a city's income distribution and that of the largest city decreases with city population, suggesting the overall shape of income distribution shifts with city population. As most urban scaling theories consider densifying interactions within cities as the fundamental process leading to the superlinear increase of many features, our results suggest this effect is only seen in the upper deciles of the cities. Our finding encourages future work to consider heterogeneous models of interactions to form a more coherent understanding of urban scaling.

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