ABSTRACT

This chapter explores the spatial distribution of the population of England and Wales in 2001 and 2011 according to a range of demographic, social and economic characteristics. Where population sub-groups are spatially concentrated, the population may be regarded as geographically unequal. In the UK, debates about the North-South divide have reflected the principal geographical division in public perception, with wealth and health inequalities at the forefront. This analysis uses the Moran’s I spatial autocorrelation coefficient to measure clustering, and variograms to characterise the differences between areas over multiple spatial scales. There is evidence for stronger spatial structure in variables including car and van availability and ethnicity than in age, self-reported illness and qualifications, and these relate to urban-rural differences in the former variables. There are shown to be marked differences in population concentrations by direction with, for example, north-south differences in qualifications being (on average) greater than those in the east-west direction. However, for most variables which show increased variation (and thus suggest increased geographical inequalities) between 2001 and 2011, increases are proportionally similar in all directions. Only in the case of self-reported ill health does the North-South (or, in this case, North West-South East) divide appear to have increased.