2006
DOI: 10.1002/psp.415
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Housing costs and the geography of family migration outcomes

Abstract: This paper takes a geographic approach towards assessing the 'returns' to family migration by addressing explicitly the impacts of differences in the cost of housing between the place of origin and place of destination for family migrants. While numerous studies have examined differences in labor-force participation and wages subsequent to migration, particularly on the part of wives, few studies have considered the local geographic context of these events. This study examines the "adjusted" outcomes from migr… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…Second, this indicates that moves of dual-earner couples do not have positive earning returns for partners on average -at least in the short run (cf. also Davies Withers & Clark 2006). This is in contrast to findings on positive returns for other types of movers, e.g.…”
Section: Descriptive Findingscontrasting
confidence: 84%
“…Second, this indicates that moves of dual-earner couples do not have positive earning returns for partners on average -at least in the short run (cf. also Davies Withers & Clark 2006). This is in contrast to findings on positive returns for other types of movers, e.g.…”
Section: Descriptive Findingscontrasting
confidence: 84%
“…Nevertheless, there is a threshold at which amenities become less influential in terms of residential preferences. As high-amenity areas attract more people, supply-side costs (housing, congestion, growth limits) start to capture the values of the amenities such that households must be willing to trade off lower real incomes to access a location's specific environmental amenities (Rappaport 2005;Withers and Clark 2006).…”
Section: Natural Amenities As a Superior Goodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Residential moves are tightly bound with the first birth, suggesting that couples move in anticipation of having a child (Clark & Withers, 2006 in the United States; Kulu & Vikat, 2008 in Finland). Kulu & Steele (2013) model the likelihood of three parity transitions following the move to different types of housing, and find that the likelihood of childbearing is positively related to moving at every parity, though the magnitude of the effect decreases with the birth order.…”
Section: Housing Context and Childbearingmentioning
confidence: 99%