Income segregation is separation of various classes of people based on their income. For example, certain people cannot get into country clubs because of insufficient funds. Income segregation is associated with greater inequality in education attainment between the classes.Income segregation is highly correlated with income inequality, racial segregation and segregation of poverty and affluence. Also, the correlation of the income segregation between schools has been documented and an increasing trend occurred with little or no exception.
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| - Income segregation is separation of various classes of people based on their income. For example, certain people cannot get into country clubs because of insufficient funds. Income segregation is associated with greater inequality in education attainment between the classes.Income segregation is highly correlated with income inequality, racial segregation and segregation of poverty and affluence. Also, the correlation of the income segregation between schools has been documented and an increasing trend occurred with little or no exception. (en)
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| - Income segregation is separation of various classes of people based on their income. For example, certain people cannot get into country clubs because of insufficient funds. Income segregation is associated with greater inequality in education attainment between the classes.Income segregation is highly correlated with income inequality, racial segregation and segregation of poverty and affluence. Also, the correlation of the income segregation between schools has been documented and an increasing trend occurred with little or no exception. Income segregation is also dependent on the other variables which are observable within the society - the income inequality, spatial segregation of affluence and poverty (which describes the isolation of the upper- or low-income households and the other classes), or the racial segregation. Also, the inequality within the education system of the given class is associated to so extend with the income segregation. The importance if the measuring income segregation is given by the different redistribution of outcomes across the society, uneven within different income classes. For the upper-income classes these differences can even be positive, often giving them better social and educational background or more pleasing environment in their metropolitan area. These neighborhoods can make themselves better off in comparison to the lower-income ones, mostly due to the given public policy (and the difference among the tax base each class pays). As a result, the income segregation even extends because no-one except these upper-income communities has and derive out of these advantages. Metropolitan income segregation in the US grew constantly between the years 1970 to 2000, the fastest in the 1980s. The growth was stronger for the black families than for the white ones as well as the covariance of income inequality and the segregation of poverty and affluence. (en)
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