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Can Boosting Minority Car-Ownership Rates Narrow Inter-Racial Employment Gaps?
Steven Raphael, Goldman School of Public Policy, University of California at Berkeley
Michael Stoll, School of Public Policy and Social Research, University of California at Berkeley
ABSTRACT: In this paper, we assess whether boosting minority car-ownership rates would narrow inter-racial
employment rate differentials. We pursue two empirical strategies. First, we explore whether the
effect of auto ownership on the probability of being employed is greater for more segregated groups
of workers. Exploiting the fact that African-Americans are considerably more segregated from
whites than are Latinos, we estimate car-employment effects for blacks, Latinos, and whites and test
whether these effects are largest for more segregated groups. Second, we use data at the level of the
metropolitan area to test whether the car-employment effect for blacks relative to that for whites
increases with the degree of black relative isolation from employment opportunities. We find the
strongest car effects for blacks, followed by Latinos, and then whites. Moreover, this ordering is
statistically significant. We also find that the relative car-employment effect for blacks is largest in
metropolitan areas where the relative isolation of blacks from employment opportunities is the most
severe. Our empirical estimates indicate that raising minority car-ownership rates to the white car
ownership rate would eliminate 45 percent of the black-white employment rate differential and 17
percent of the comparable Latinbo-white differential.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Steven Raphael and Michael Stoll,
"Can Boosting Minority Car-Ownership Rates Narrow Inter-Racial Employment Gaps?"
(June 1, 2000).
Berkeley Program on Housing and Urban Policy.
Working Papers:
Paper W00-002.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iber/bphup/working_papers/W00-002
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