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Tens of millions of Americans are being left out of the economic recovery — and it's easier than ever to see who they are

More than 52 million Americans live in deeply-disadvantaged, "distressed" neighborhoods.

  • More than 52 million Americans live in deeply-disadvantaged, "distressed" neighborhoods, report finds.
  • Distressed areas saw declines in both jobs and business establishments despite the economic recovery.
  • Wealthy neighborhoods have dominated the recovery, generating 52% of the country’s new jobs.
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There’s a new interactive tool online that helps Americans visualize just how deeply economically divided the nation has become — and it's not a pretty picture.

The country’s deep income and wealth inequalities, which match levels not seen since before the Great Depression, have been widely reported.

But the Distressed Communities Index, published by a Washington-based non-profit called Economic Innovation Group (EIG), adds some startling new detail and localized specificity to the widening and persistent gap between the country’s rich and poor, the worst of any "advanced" economy.

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The US economy has, on paper, been recovering from the Great Recession since the summer of 2009. Recently, growth has hovered around 2% per year, and the unemployment rate has fallen to just 4.4%.

Still, much of the population has not felt the gains of this rebound, which is among the longest in modern history but also the weakest.

"It is fair to wonder whether a recovery that excludes tens of millions of Americans and thousands of communities deserves to be called a recovery at all," the EIG says in its Distressed Communities Index report.

"The consequences extend far beyond the individual communities being left behind. The further we go down the path of geographically exclusive growth, the more we limit our nation’s economic potential as a whole — and the more fractured our society risks becoming in the process."

This finding is in line with a recent shift in thinking at major institutions like the International Monetary Fund, which now argues that too much inequality is actively harmful to the long-run growth potential of economies.

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Here are some depressing findings from the EIG report, which finds more than 52 million Americans are living in distressed zip codes:

• Job growth in the average distressed zip code was negative from 2011 to 2015, trailing the average prosperous zip code by more than 30 percentage points.

Meanwhile, on the right side of the tracks:

• 88% of prosperous zip codes experienced job growth from 2011 to 2015, and 85% saw rising numbers of business establishments.

"Outside of the upper echelon, however, growth rapidly becomes less pervasive," EIG adds. "Only three out of every four comfortable zip codes saw job growth over the period, and the number of business establishments rose in only two out of every three zip codes in this second best-performing tier."

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For the poorest Americans, "stagnation and decline were the rule, not the exception."

Just two of five distressed zip codes saw any job growth over the five years of recovery, and only about one in five saw the number of business establishments rise.

More than half (55%) of distressed zip codes experienced net declines in both jobs and business establishments over the 2011-2015 recovery period, compared to fewer than one quarter of mid-tier zip codes and a mere 3% of prosperous zip codes.

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