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Residential Segregation and Unequal Access to Local Public Services in India: Evidence from 1.5m Neighborhoods

Sam Asher (), Kritarth Jha (), Paul Novosad, Anjali Adukia and Brandon Tan
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Kritarth Jha: Development Data Lab

No 740, Working Papers from Center for Global Development

Abstract: We study residential segregation and access to public services across 1.5 million urban and rural neighborhoods in India. Muslim and Scheduled Caste segregation in India is high by global standards, and only slightly lower than Black-White segregation in the US. Within cities, public facilities and infrastructure are systematically less available in Muslim and Scheduled Caste neighborhoods. Nearly all regressive allocation occurs within neighborhoods within cities—at the most informal and least studied level of government. These inequalities are not visible in the aggregate data typically used for research and policy.

JEL-codes: H4 H41 I24 J15 O15 R12 R13 R23 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 75 pages
Date: 2026-02-11
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Related works:
Working Paper: Residential Segregation and Unequal Access to Local Public Services in India: Evidence from 1.5m Neighborhoods (2026) Downloads
Working Paper: Residential Segregation and Unequal Access to Local Public Services in India: Evidence from 1.5m Neighborhoods (2026) Downloads
Working Paper: Residential Segregation and Unequal Access to Local Public Services in India: Evidence from 1.5m Neighborhoods (2026) Downloads
Working Paper: Residential Segregation and Unequal Access to Local Public Services in India: Evidence from 1.5m Neighborhoods (2026) Downloads
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