Literature DB >> 28547003

Why Did People Move During the Great Recession?: The Role of Economics in Migration Decisions.

Brian L Levy1,2, Ted Mouw1,2, Anthony Daniel Perez1,2.   

Abstract

Labor migration offers an important mechanism to reallocate workers when there are regional differences in employment conditions. Whereas conventional wisdom suggests migration rates should increase during recessions as workers move out of areas that are hit hardest, initial evidence suggested that overall migration rates declined during the Great Recession, despite large regional differences in unemployment and growth rates. In this paper, we use data from the American Community Survey to analyze internal migration trends before and during the economic downturn. First, we find only a modest decline in the odds of adults leaving distressed labor market areas during the recession, which may result in part from challenges related to the housing price crash. Second, we estimate conditional logit models of destination choice for individuals who migrate across labor market areas and find a substantial effect of economic factors such as labor demand, unemployment, and housing values. We also estimate latent class conditional logit models that test whether there is heterogeneity in preferences for destination characteristics among migrants. Over all, the latent class models suggest that roughly equal percentages of migrants were motivated by economic factors before and during the recession. We conclude that fears of dramatic declines in labor migration seem to be unsubstantiated.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Great Recession; latent class conditional logits; migration

Year:  2017        PMID: 28547003      PMCID: PMC5439978          DOI: 10.7758/rsf.2017.3.3.05

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  RSF


  5 in total

1.  Regional growth and migration: a Japan-United States comparison.

Authors:  R J Barro; X Sala-i-martin
Journal:  J Jpn Int Econ       Date:  1992-12

2.  Macroeconomic influences on migration.

Authors:  W J Milne
Journal:  Reg Stud       Date:  1993

3.  Migration as spatial job-search: a survey of empirical findings.

Authors:  H W Herzog; A M Schlottmann; T P Boehm
Journal:  Reg Stud       Date:  1993

4.  Interstate migration has fallen less than you think: consequences of hot deck imputation in the current population survey.

Authors:  Greg Kaplan; Sam Schulhofer-Wohl
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2012-08

5.  METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN THE ANALYSIS OF RESIDENTIAL PREFERENCES, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND NEIGHBORHOOD CHANGE.

Authors:  Elizabeth E Bruch; Robert D Mare
Journal:  Sociol Methodol       Date:  2012-08
  5 in total
  1 in total

1.  The U.S. Labor Market During and After the Great Recession: Continuities and Transformations.

Authors:  Arne L Kalleberg; Till M VON Wachter
Journal:  RSF       Date:  2017-04
  1 in total

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