Memph
Active Member
Btw neighbourhoodchange.ca has maps at the CMA level.
http://3cities.neighbourhoodchange....fs/Toronto-CMA-2005-Avg-Individual-Income.pdf
Go here and click on additional maps for more. The immigrant map is also interesting.
http://3cities.neighbourhoodchange.ca
It seems the biggest reduction in middle income neighbourhoods was in the 90s, and to a lesser extent 80s and 00s. In the 70s, the expansion of low income areas was in line with the expansion of the city as a whole.
I think incomes declined from 2005 to 2010 in much of Richmond Hill, Markham, Brampton and Mississauga, although some suburbs seem to have rebounded a little in the last few years.
http://3cities.neighbourhoodchange....fs/Toronto-CMA-2005-Avg-Individual-Income.pdf
Go here and click on additional maps for more. The immigrant map is also interesting.
http://3cities.neighbourhoodchange.ca
It seems the biggest reduction in middle income neighbourhoods was in the 90s, and to a lesser extent 80s and 00s. In the 70s, the expansion of low income areas was in line with the expansion of the city as a whole.
I think incomes declined from 2005 to 2010 in much of Richmond Hill, Markham, Brampton and Mississauga, although some suburbs seem to have rebounded a little in the last few years.