Literature DB >> 22109084

Different reasons, different results: implications of migration by gender and family status.

Claudia Geist1, Patricia A McManus.   

Abstract

Previous research on migration and gendered career outcomes centers on couples and rarely examines the reason for the move. The implicit assumption is usually that households migrate in response to job opportunities. Based on a two-year panel from the Current Population Survey, this article uses stated reasons for geographic mobility to compare earnings outcomes among job migrants, family migrants, and quality-of-life migrants by gender and family status. We further assess the impact of migration on couples' internal household economy. The effects of job-related moves that we find are reduced substantially in the fixed-effects models, indicating strong selection effects. Married women who moved for family reasons experience significant and substantial earnings declines. Consistent with conventional models of migration, we find that household earnings and income and gender specialization increase following job migration. Married women who are secondary earners have increased odds of reducing their labor supply following migration for job or family reasons. However, we also find that migrating women who contributed as equals to the household economy before the move are no more likely than nonmigrant women to exit work or to work part-time. Equal breadwinner status may protect women from becoming tied movers.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22109084     DOI: 10.1007/s13524-011-0074-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Demography        ISSN: 0070-3370


  1 in total

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Authors:  Terra McKinnish
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2008-11
  1 in total
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Journal:  AJS       Date:  2013-03-01

2.  Making Full Use of the Longitudinal Design of the Current Population Survey: Methods for Linking Records Across 16 Months.

Authors:  Julia A Rivera Drew; Sarah Flood; John Robert Warren
Journal:  J Econ Soc Meas       Date:  2014

3.  Life Course Events and Migration in the Transition to Adulthood.

Authors:  Jonathan Horowitz; Barbara Entwisle
Journal:  Soc Forces       Date:  2020-10-21

4.  Re-thinking residential mobility: Linking lives through time and space.

Authors:  Rory Coulter; Maarten van Ham; Allan M Findlay
Journal:  Prog Hum Geogr       Date:  2015-03-16
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