Search Results

Showing results 1 to 10 of approximately 14.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Keywords:Metropolitan areas 

Journal Article
Spotlight: Texas subprime mortgages: metros vary on risky loans--and delinquencies

The current financial crisis has brought a severe decline in subprime mortgage lending. Like the nation, Texas and its metros still have exposure to existing loans. Housing prices, unemployment and overall economic activity will play a significant part in determining how many of them run into trouble.
Southwest Economy , Issue Q1 , Pages 7

Journal Article
Opportunity Zones: Understanding the Background and Potential Impact in Northeastern Illinois

This article offers a primer on: Opportunity Zones, highlighting the designation process for census tracts in northeastern Illinois; Qualified Opportunity Funds (QOF) ? the vehicle that will facilitate investment in designated areas; and finally, how QOFs will help facilitate the goals of the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning?s ON TO 2050 Plan.
Profitwise , Issue 1 , Pages 1-16

Discussion Paper
Economic distress and resurgence in U.S. central cities: concepts, causes, and policy levers

This paper provides a review of the literature on U.S. central city growth and distress during the second half of the twentieth century. It finds that city growth tended to be higher in metropolitan areas with favorable weather, higher growth, and greater human capital, while distress was strongly correlated with city-level manufacturing legacy. The article affirms that distress has been highly persistent, but that some cities have achieved resurgence through a combination of strong leadership, collaboration across sectors and institutions, clear and broad-based strategies, and significant ...
Public Policy Discussion Paper , Paper 13-3

Journal Article
Growth--metropolitan vs. nonmetropolitan areas in the central Mississippi valley

Review , Volume 51 , Issue Jan , Pages 8-15

Journal Article
Location dynamics: a key consideration for urban policy

What determines where businesses and households locate? Location decisions can affect the economic health of cities and metropolitan areas. But as Jeffrey Brinkman explains, how firms, residents, and workers go about choosing where to locate can involve complex interactions with sometimes unpredictable consequences.
Business Review , Issue 1 , Pages 9-15

Journal Article
Income growth shows Houston's economic strength and maturity

Houston Business , Issue Dec

Journal Article
A metropolitan issue : can cities and suburbs peacefully coexist?

TEN , Issue Win , Pages 10-15

Journal Article
Three keys to the city: resources, agglomeration economies, and sorting

Metropolitan areas in the U.S. contain almost 80 percent of the nation?s population and nearly 85 percent of its jobs. This high degree of spatial concentration of people and jobs leads to congestion costs and higher housing costs. To offset these costs, workers must receive higher wages, and higher wages increase firms? costs. So why do firms continue to produce in cities where the cost of doing business is so high? Economists offer three main explanations. First, cities developed and grew because of some natural advantage, such as a port. Second, as cities grew, the resulting concentration ...
Business Review , Issue Q3 , Pages 1-13

Journal Article
The concentration of poverty within metropolitan areas

Not only has poverty recently increased in the United States, it has also become more concentrated. This Commentary documents changes in the concentration of poverty in metropolitan areas over the last decade. The analysis shows that the concentration of poverty tends to be highest in northern cities, and that wherever overall poverty or unemployment rates went up the most over the course of the decade, the concentration of poverty tended to increase there as well.
Economic Commentary , Issue Jan

Working Paper
Regional resilience

In this paper, I study long-run population changes across U.S. metropolitan areas. First, I argue that changes over a long period of time in the geographic distribution of population can be informative about the so-called resilience" of regions. Using the censuses of population from1790 to 2010, I find that persistent declines, lasting two decades or more, are somewhat rare among metropolitan areas in U.S. history, though more common recently. Incorporating data on historical factors, I find that metropolitan areas that have experienced extended periods of weak population growth tend to be ...
Working Papers , Paper 13-01

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Series

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Jel Classification

J11 2 items

J21 1 items

J81 1 items

FILTER BY Keywords

PREVIOUS / NEXT