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Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Decomposition Analysis

Daniel H. Freeman
- 01 May 1974 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 2, pp 328-328
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This article is published in Technometrics.The article was published on 1974-05-01. It has received 717 citations till now.

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The Dimensions of Residential Segregation

TL;DR: In this article, residential segregation is viewed as a multidimensional phenomenon varying along five distinct axes of measurement: evenness exposure concentration centralization and clustering, and 20 indices of segregation are surveyed and related conceptually to 1 of the five dimensions.
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Related variety, unrelated variety and regional economic growth

TL;DR: Frenken et al. as discussed by the authors argued that Jacobs externalities are best measured by related variety (within sectors), while the portfolio argument is better captured by unrelated variety (between sectors).
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Where is the Land of Opportunity? The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility in the United States*

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use administrative records on the incomes of more than 40 million children and their parents to describe three features of intergenerational mobility in the United States: the joint distribution of parent and child income at the national level, the conditional expectation of child income given parent income, and the factors correlated with upward mobility.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why is economic geography not an evolutionary science? Towards an evolutionary economic geography

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the commonalities and differences between the three approaches in terms of soft-heoretical content and research methodologies, and argue that evolutionary economic geography can be seen as a bridge between evolutionary theory and institutional and evolutionary theory.
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Decomposition procedures for distributional analysis: a unified framework based on the Shapley value

TL;DR: Decomposition techniques are used in many fields of economics to help disentangle and quantify the impact of various causal factors as discussed by the authors, and their use is particularly widespread in studies of poverty and inequality.