Tax base fragmentation in Ann Arbor. Ypsilanti has a lower than average tax base per capita, while Barton Hills has a far higher tax base than average.
And look up your own hometown at www.taxbasefragmentation.net!
Tax base fragmentation in Ann Arbor. Ypsilanti has a lower than average tax base per capita, while Barton Hills has a far higher tax base than average.
And look up your own hometown at www.taxbasefragmentation.net!
Every Ann Arborite's goal is to get covered by the @annarborobserver.bsky.social - really appreciate the care that @drew-journalist93.bsky.social took in describing our work. And thrilled that it resonated with @ypsicity.bsky.social!
annarborobserver.com/tax-imbalance/
This is me every time I write a new paper 😆
Thanks! Yeah I wasn't really satisfied with the legend appearance (and the fiscal capacity ratio itself isn't an immediately obvious concept). Appreciate the perseverance!
Amazing--thanks!!
Huge fan of the channel—thanks for all your work!
And metro-level stats on the overall level of tax base fragmentation
We also have data on the municipalities that are most disadvantaged relative to their metro (think Detroit, Newark, etc., but also tiny cities that are in even worse straights) www.chicagotribune.com/2025/01/05/b...
Others are corporate enclaves with hardly any residents (Vernon CA is especially wild) www.latimes.com/business/sto...
Some of these are exclusive suburbs like the Park Cities in Dallas or Median/Hunts Point in Seattle www.businessinsider.com/billionaire-...
With this data, you can identify which individual jurisdictions have per capita tax bases way higher than their metro average—benefiting from their regional economies and infrastructure, but not contributing to the regional tax base. They’re municipal tax havens!
Some collaborators and I used property tax records to put together a dataset of the per capita tax base for every municipality in the country bsky.app/profile/bhig...
@nerd4cities.bsky.social Video suggestion: the top 10 most egregious municipal tax havens in the United States www.taxbasefragmentation.net
Really excited to present work on tax base fragmentation at @umisr.bsky.social tomorrow! Come check it out!
Graphic with a quote and a photo of Sarah Patterson, Research Assistant Professor at the Institute for Social Research. Quote text reads: “Our findings show that the public continues to see the family as highly responsible for the care of older adults, but that levels of responsibility vary by relationship type.” Sarah Patterson is smiling, wearing glasses, a yellow cardigan, and black top, with the ISR building in the background.
Who should care for older adults, especially when dementia is involved?
New ISR research led by @spattersearch.bsky.social finds strong expectations for family caregiving, even as families shrink and needs grow.
Learn more about this study on caregiving expectations: myumi.ch/kPEqj
graphic for the Stone Center for Inequality Dynamics. A quote from Alexander Adames reads: “The community and opportunities provided by the Stone Center made Michigan the choice in deciding where to start my career as a wealth scholar.” To the right is a headshot of Alexander Adames, a smiling man with short curly hair wearing a white button-up shirt. The graphic includes the Stone Center for Inequality Dynamics logo at the bottom.
@umichstonecid.bsky.social at ISR has received a 5 million dollar gift from the Stone Foundation to advance research on wealth inequality and mobility.
Learn more about this gift to the Stone Center: myumi.ch/Nr4pD
Testimonial from Alexander Adames praising the Stone Center for its role in his decision to start his career as a wealth scholar at Michigan, with university and center branding.
We’re thrilled to share that @umichstonecid.bsky.social has received a new $5M gift from the Stone Foundation to continue our critical work to produce research on social inequality and train the next generation of #inequality scholars. Learn more:
myumi.ch/e35w2
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Cool new article alert 🚨: Tax Base Fragmentation as a Dimension of Metropolitan Inequality by @robertmanduca.bsky.social, @bhighsmith.bsky.social, Jacob Waggoner.
academic.oup.com/ser/article/...
Love seeing this use of our tax base fragmentation viz!!
🚨We analyzed 138 million geocoded property tax records to quantify how municipal boundaries spatially overlap onto economic segregation in every US metro area—creating disparities in localities’ ability to fund public goods. And we made an interactive map of our results! [1/16]
Check out this 🧵 on our own @robertmanduca.bsky.social's work with @bhighsmith.bsky.social and Jacob Waggoner. 👇 #AcademicSky #WealthInequality
We conceptualize ‘tax base fragmentation’: the spatial concentration (within a metro area) of property wealth in particular wealthy municipalities. The concept is intuitive—but not captured by existing measures of segregation and jurisdictional fragmentation. Link: academic.oup.com/ser/advance-...
Check out our new paper (+ the accompanying web viz)!
A new working paper from @umichstonecid.bsky.social/SRC researcher @robertmanduca.bsky.social examining the geography of social transfer programs & implications for cuts to Medicaid & SNAP in the recently signed federal budget.
Also see: equitablegrowth.org/medicaid-and...
In @marketwatch.com @robertmanduca.bsky.social helps break down what's at stake for local communities as a result of Medicaid cuts in the One Big Beautiful Bill—on average these safety-net programs account for 40 percent of money flowing into local communities.
www.marketwatch.com/story/how-th...
Hey that's @robertmanduca.bsky.social's research!