County Amenities and Net Migration
Anil Rupasingha and
Stephan Goetz
Agricultural and Resource Economics Review, 2004, vol. 33, issue 2, 245-254
Abstract:
U.S. county-level net migration data and a general spatial model are used to examine the effects of various amenities on migration decisions. Results suggest that higher county cancer risks and the presence of superfund sites in a county, or a higher ranking on the Environmental Protection Agency's hazard ranking system, reduce the relative attractiveness of a county to prospective migrants, while natural amenities on balance attract migrants, ceteris paribus. The results also reveal spatial dependence among contiguous counties in terms of net migration behavior.
Date: 2004
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