Poverty rates are slightly lower in metropolitan areas than elsewhere, even though income inequality is 3.3% higher than the national average.
Metropolitan areas recorded slightly higher income inequality than non-metropolitan areas in 11 OECD countries where data was available. This reflects in part a relatively higher concentration of human capital in metropolitan areas compared to other places. On average, the Gini index of inequality is 3.3% higher in metropolitan areas than in the rest of the respective country ( 4.13). The countries with the largest national income inequality such as Chile, the US and Canada also display the largest variation in income inequality across metropolitan areas. For instance, dispersion in Canada is highest, with the Gini index in Calgary being approximately 0.45 but only 0.29 in Québec city. In the US, income inequality is 31% higher in Miami than in the city of Lancaster (PA). Santiago in Chile is the most unequal city in the 10 countries considered.