Urban segregation and local retail environments. Evidence from Mexico City

This paper addresses urban segregation in terms of the spatial availability of everyday consumer goods and services to urban households at the local level. The paper distinguishes low and high-income segregated areas as well as non-segregated areas within Mexico City metropolitan area, and compares...

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Published inHabitat international Vol. 54; no. 1; pp. 58 - 64
Main Authors Ruiz-Rivera, Naxhelli, Suárez, Manuel, Delgado-Campos, Javier
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.05.2016
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Summary:This paper addresses urban segregation in terms of the spatial availability of everyday consumer goods and services to urban households at the local level. The paper distinguishes low and high-income segregated areas as well as non-segregated areas within Mexico City metropolitan area, and compares the distribution of firms where households may acquire every day consumer goods and services within each type of area. The analysis shows that the main differences between low and high-income segregated areas in terms of retail environments in which they buy their main satisfiers are (1) low-income segregated areas have the lowest retail density, have the least firms per capita, and thus, these are spatially scarcer (2) both private and public providers (particularly those related to education and health) show less quality in terms of the relative number employees per business. The evidence suggests that income segregation generates an unequal demand of goods and services across the city, which excludes important sectors of urban population from the collective benefits of such satisfiers. •Urban retail environments influence the spatial availability of crucial urban goods.•Businesses are spatially scarcer at low-income segregated areas.•Public providers of goods and services show less quality in low-income areas.•Low-income segregation relates to deficient retail environments.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
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ISSN:0197-3975
1873-5428
DOI:10.1016/j.habitatint.2014.09.001