| > Bike commuting always seemed to me like a niche white thing Hopefully someone can find some more recent data on it, but as of 2009 [1] the demographics of cyclists in the US mostly matched up with the demographics of the overall population, with a couple of exceptions: white: - % of bike trips: 79%
- share of population: 75%
black: - % of bike trips: 10%
- share of population: 12%
hispanic: - % of bike trips: 8%
- share of population: 15%
asian: - % of bike trips: 3%
- share of population: 4%
So only hispanics were notably underrepresented, with white, black and asian people being pretty close to their share of the population, and while there was a minor overrepresentation of white people at the time, it was trending toward racial parity (in comparison to 2001 data), and over a decade later I wouldn't be surprised if it's even closer.For income level, the poorest quartile was overrepresented (31%), but the other three quartiles were pretty close (21%, 23%, 25%). So with cycling being far less common in the US compared to other countries with safer infrastructure (0.6% of people bike to work in the US [2] compared to 27% in the Netherlands [3]), you're not going to see many cyclists, and since white people make up a large percentage of the population, if you see a cyclist, there's a fair chance that they'll be white. But as the country becomes more diverse (and hopefully more people begin cycling to work), hopefully that perception will fade, and hopefully the trend toward racial parity for cycling continues. 1. https://grist.org/biking/2011-04-06-race-class-and-the-demog... 2. https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2019/05/younger-worke... 3. https://www.government.nl/binaries/government/documenten/rep... (edit: formatting) |
Interesting stats in this article anyhow, especially about how effective bike lanes are at encouraging ridership among underrepresented demographics:
https://www.intelligenttransport.com/transport-news/122846/l...