The determinants of migration between standard metropolitan statistical areas

Author:

Greenwood Michael J.1,Sweetland Douglas2

Affiliation:

1. Office of Economic Research, Economic Development Administration, United States Department of Commerce, Washington, D. C. 20230

2. Department of Economics, University of Wisconsin at LaCrosse, LaCrosse, Wisconsin 54601

Abstract

Abstract The primary purpose of this paper is to analyze the “determinants” of migration between Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSA’s) in the United States. The magnitudes in which various factors have influenced inter-SMSA migration are estimated both for the country as a whole and for individual SMSA’s. The “migration elasticities” estimated for individual SMSA’s are in turn used to test several additional hypotheses concerning migrant behavior. Other similar migration studies have found “wrong” signs or insignificant coefficients on certain variables a priori thought to play a crucial role in the migration process. Finally, we present clues to the causes of such “surprising” results.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference36 articles.

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2. Rationality and migration in Ghana;Beals;Review of Economics and Statistics,1967

3. Migration rates in twelve Southern metropolitan areas: a “push-pull” analysis;Blevins;Social Science Quarterly,1969

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