Spatial Mismatch, Poverty, and Vulnerable Populations
Book section: Spatial mismatch relates the unemployment and poverty of vulnerable population groups to their remoteness from job opportunities. Although the intuition initially applied to African Americans in US inner cities, spatial mismatch has a broader validity beyond the sole US context. In light of a detailed presentation of the mechanisms at work, we present the main results from various empirical tests of the spatial mismatch theory. Since key aspects of that theory remain to be tested, we also discuss methodological approaches and provide guidance for further research. We derive lessons for policy implications and comment on the appropriateness of related urban policies.
Author(s)
Laurent Gobillon, Harris Selod
Publisher(s)
- Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Title of the work
- Handbook of Regional Science
Date of publication
- 2021
Keywords
- Location choice
- Labor market outcome
- Unemployed worker
- Spatial mismatch
- Labor market discrimination
Pages
- 573-588
URL of the HAL notice
Version
- 1