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International Regional Science Review
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Article

Why Some Rural Places Prosper While Others Do Not

Andrew M. Isserman1*, Edward Feser2, and Drake E. Warren3

1 Departments of Agricultural and Consumer Economics and Urban and Regional Planning
2 Departments of Urban and Regional Planning and Agricultural and Consumer Economics
3 Sandia National Laboratories

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: isserman{at}illinois.edu.


   Abstract

More than 300 rural counties are more prosperous than the nation. Each has lower unemployment rates, lower poverty rates, lower school dropout rates, and better housing conditions than the nation. Prosperous counties tend to have more educated populations, more diverse economies, more private non-farm jobs, more farmers and government farm payments, more creative class occupations, and more equal income distributions. They have fewer African-American, American Indian, or Hispanic residents and fewer recent immigrants. Some findings support what many rural people believe to be true: civically engaged religious groups and other identities that bind people together can really matter. Other results contradict conventional wisdom. For instance, climate and distances to cities and major airports, are relatively unimportant. Focusing on prosperity, instead of growth or competitiveness, provides new insights into rural conditions and prospects.

First published on June 9, 2009, doi:10.1177/0160017609336090

International Regional Science Review 2009;32:300.

A more recent version of this article appeared on July 1, 2009


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