Is Chicago's population growing or shrinking?
Answers from top 10 papers
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Papers (10) | Insight |
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Open access•Journal Article 8 Citations | The Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission expects the trend to continue, with Chicago's population rising to 3,007,025 in 2020. |
21 Citations | Our evidence also suggests that shrinking cities have less fiscal capacity than growing cities, although this relationship is complicated by an apparent nonlinearity: Shrinking and rapidly growing cities both have less fiscal capacity than high-demand cities that grow slowly. |
12 Citations | The recent slowdown in the geographic expansion of Chicago's poverty areas is highly correlated with the declining city-wide rate of population loss. |
12 Citations | Irrespective of this slowdown in territorial expansion, the residential function of Chicago's poverty areas is becoming increasingly obsolete as fewer and fewer people... |
28 Citations | (4)Total GDP, GDP per capita, fiscal expenditures, employment, and built-up area have a significant impact on the population of shrinking cities. |
15 Citations | We also find that local areas with shrinking populations had disproportionately high minority representation in 2000 before population loss took place. |
We found that low socio-economic status residents and older residents dominate the population of shrinking regions, and unsurprisingly that the most ‘successful’ people are the most likely to leave such regions. | |
31 Citations | The growing population provides a boon to the city, but is also leads to an increasing social, economic, and cultural divide. |
7 Citations | Empirical results offer evidence for dispersion of metropolitan population size, notwithstanding the growing concentration of urban population in metropolitan areas as compared to non-metropolitan areas. |
47 Citations | The results showed that the number of shrinking cities and the shrinking degree continuously increased from 1990 to 2010 in China. |