000 01922pab a2200205 454500
008 180718b1999 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aStoff, Michael A.
245 _aSpatial mismatch, discrimination, and male youth employment in the Washington, DC area: implications for residential mobility policies
260 _c1999
300 _ap.77-78
362 _aWinter
520 _aResidential mobility policies are in part premised on the assumption that place and not race explains blacks' joblessness in central cities. The article investigates the potential effects of residential mobility programs by analyzing a "natural" black residential mobility process in the Washington, DC area, where black suburbanization has coincided with suburban job growth. Using data from the 1990 Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), this article examines the relative contribution of place and race in explaining racial differences in employment for young men with a high school diploma or less. The results show that having a suburban residential location improves young males' spatial access to jobs, but that the employment benefits are greater for white than comparable black youth. Simulations point to racial discrimination in suburban labor markets being as important as having a suburban residential location as an explanation of white-black employment rate differences in the Washington, DC area. Thus, if residential mobility programs are to be fully effective in improving central city minorities' employment prospects, antidiscrimination enforcement efforts in suburban labor markets must be included in the policy package. - Reproduced
650 _aResidential mobility - United States
650 _aYouth - United States
650 _aEmployment - United States
650 _aInternal migration - United States
650 _aEmployment
773 _aJournal of Policy Analysis and Management
909 _a40107
999 _c40107
_d40107