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Is the 'Shop Around the Corner' a Luxury or a Nuisance? The relationship between income and neighborhood retail patterns

Jenny Schuetz, Jed Kolko and Rachel Meltzer

No 8513, Working Paper from USC Lusk Center for Real Estate

Abstract: Affluent neighborhoods present a potentially attractive location for retail establishments because of their higher purchasing power and demand for a wide range of specialized goods and services. However, if high income households perceive retail in general – or certain types of retail, such as Big Box stores – as an undesirable use, they may be able to block commercial development through zoning and the political process. In thispaper we shed light on these issues by examining the relationship betweenneighborhood income and several different types of retail presence for 58 large U.S metropolitan areas. We combine detailed data from the National Establishment TimeSeries database on retail establishments and employment, by industry category and firm type, with Census data on ZCTA income and demographics. Results indicate that retail density varies with income for certain retail types, such as food service and chain supermarkets and drugstores. In addition, average establishment size increases with income for all retail types. Retail density increases with population density, as expected, and decreases with distance to CBD and with share of owner-occupied housing.

Keywords: Retail employment; firm location; commercial land use; neighborhood income; chain stores; neighborhood amenities (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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