美国无家可归人口的规模和普查覆盖范围

IF 5.7 1区 经济学 Q1 ECONOMICS Journal of Urban Economics Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jue.2023.103559
Bruce D. Meyer , Angela Wyse , Kevin Corinth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于无家可归人口的规模和特征的基本问题尚未解决,因为尚不清楚现有数据是否足够完整和可靠。我们研究了这些问题以及旨在具有全国代表性的新微观数据来源的覆盖范围。我们比较了两个基本上未用于研究无家可归问题的受限数据来源,即2010年人口普查和美国社区调查(ACS),与受限的无家可归者管理信息系统(HMIS)数据、住房和城市发展部的公共使用时间点(PIT)估计以及国家和个人层面的住房存量统计(HIC)。我们还开发了一种新的方法,使用关联的人口普查和HMIS微观数据来估计受庇护的无家可归人口的规模。我们的分析表明,在某个特定的夜晚,美国约有40万人在收容所无家可归,约有20万人露宿街头,后一种估计存在更大的不确定性。收容所中90%以上的人似乎被计入人口普查,尽管许多人被归类为有住所或其他集体宿舍,这主要是由于无家可归者收容所的定义不明确。本文利用这些关于美国无家可归人口的数据为开创性的未来工作奠定了基础。
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The size and Census coverage of the U.S. homeless population

Fundamental questions about the size and characteristics of the homeless population are unresolved because it is unclear whether existing data are sufficiently complete and reliable. We examine these questions and the coverage of new microdata sources that are designed to be nationally representative. We compare two restricted data sources largely unused to study homelessness, the 2010 Census and American Community Survey (ACS), to restricted Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) data, HUD's public-use point-in-time (PIT) estimates, and the Housing Inventory Count (HIC) at the national and individual level. We also develop a new approach to estimating the size of the sheltered homeless population using linked Census and HMIS microdata. Our analyses suggest that on a given night there are about 400,000 people experiencing homelessness in shelters in the U.S. and about 200,000 people sleeping on the streets, with this latter estimate subject to greater uncertainty. More than 90 percent of those in shelters appear to be counted in the Census, although many are classified as housed or in other group quarters, due largely to ambiguity in the definition of a homeless shelter. This paper lays the foundation for pathbreaking future work with these data on the U.S. homeless population.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.60
自引率
4.80%
发文量
64
期刊介绍: The Journal of Urban Economics provides a focal point for the publication of research papers in the rapidly expanding field of urban economics. It publishes papers of great scholarly merit on a wide range of topics and employing a wide range of approaches to urban economics. The Journal welcomes papers that are theoretical or empirical, positive or normative. Although the Journal is not intended to be multidisciplinary, papers by noneconomists are welcome if they are of interest to economists. Brief Notes are also published if they lie within the purview of the Journal and if they contain new information, comment on published work, or new theoretical suggestions.
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