When Choosing Where to Eat, Race Matters
Some aspects of American life, such as eating out, remain fragmented along racial lines.
When Choosing Where to Eat, Race MattersWe provide measures of ethnic and racial segregation in urban consumption. Using Yelp reviews, we estimate how spatial and social frictions influence restaurant visits within New York City. Transit time plays a first-order role in consumption choices, so consumption segregation partly reflects residential segregation. Social frictions also affect restaurant choices: individuals are less likely to visit venues in neighborhoods demographically different from their own. While spatial and social frictions jointly produce significant levels of consumption segregation, we find that restaurant consumption is only about half as segregated as residences. Consumption segregation owes more to social than spatial frictions.
Published in: Journal of Political Economy
Some aspects of American life, such as eating out, remain fragmented along racial lines.
When Choosing Where to Eat, Race Matters