Butler Jaclyn, Wildermuth Grace A, Thiede Brian C, Brown David L
The Pennsylvania State University, Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology, and Education, State College, Pennsylvania, US.
Cornell University, Department of Development Sociology, Ithaca, New York, US.
Popul Res Policy Rev. 2020 Oct;39(5):889-911. doi: 10.1007/s11113-020-09606-7. Epub 2020 Sep 15.
This paper examines the effects of population growth and decline on county-level income inequality in the rural United States from 1980 to 2016. Findings from previous research have shown that population growth is positively associated with income inequality. However, these studies are largely motivated by theories of urbanization and growth in metropolitan areas, and do not explicitly test for differences between the impacts of population growth and decline. Examining the effects of both forms of population change on income inequality is particularly important in rural counties of the United States, the majority of which are experiencing population decline. We analyze county-level data (N=11,320 county-decades) from the U.S. Decennial Census and American Community Survey, applying fixed-effects regression models to estimate the respective effects of population growth and decline on income inequality within rural counties. We find that both forms of population change have significant effects on income inequality relative to stable growth. Population decline is associated with increases in income inequality, while population growth is marginally associated with decreases in inequality. These relationships are consistent across a variety of model specifications, including models that account for counties' employment, sociodemographic, and ethno-racial composition. We also find that the relationship between income inequality and population change varies by counties' geographic region, baseline level of inequality, and baseline population size, suggesting that the links between population change and income inequality are not uniform across rural America.
本文考察了1980年至2016年期间美国农村县级层面人口增长与下降对收入不平等的影响。以往研究的结果表明,人口增长与收入不平等呈正相关。然而,这些研究主要受城市化理论和大都市区增长理论的推动,并未明确检验人口增长与下降影响之间的差异。在美国农村县,考察这两种人口变化形式对收入不平等的影响尤为重要,因为其中大多数县正经历人口下降。我们分析了来自美国十年一次人口普查和美国社区调查的县级数据(N = 11320个县十年),应用固定效应回归模型来估计农村县内人口增长与下降对收入不平等的各自影响。我们发现,相对于稳定增长而言,这两种人口变化形式对收入不平等均有显著影响。人口下降与收入不平等加剧相关,而人口增长与不平等程度略有下降相关。在各种模型设定中,包括考虑了各县就业、社会人口统计和种族构成的模型中,这些关系都是一致的。我们还发现,收入不平等与人口变化之间的关系因县的地理区域、不平等的基线水平和基线人口规模而异,这表明在美国农村,人口变化与收入不平等之间的联系并非一致。