Income, Employment, and Urban Residential LocationMonograph on the location of low income urban area households in central areas of cities in the USA due to such variables as housing costs and employment opportunities - presents a model of the spacial distribution of urban residence, and includes implications for urban planning of urban land use, etc. Bibliography pp. 125 to 129 and references. |
Contents
The problem an approach and a perspective | 1 |
68 | 10 |
Variables of the model | 41 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
areal share Boston capital central city Chapter characteristics competing bids costs density and land density zoning determined developed acre dummy variable dwelling units effect elasticity of gross employment density employment opportunities equilibrium land estimated elasticities exogenous expected expenditures free market governmental gross density regressions gross residential density high-income households included income classes independent variables indicate Land Economics land rent land use gross land values location decisions location theory lot size requirements low-income households manufacturing Massachusetts Massachusetts Department measure metropolitan minimum lot municipal services National Tax Journal net density nonland factors nonland inputs percent price of land property tax rates proxy public housing quality index region regres regression equations regression results rent curve rental residential location residential rents retail employment retail trade sample service quality significant sity tion U. S. Bureau U. S. Census U. S. Government Printing urban area Urban Land Institute value of land