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Migration and Return Migration: A New Look at the Eastern Kentucky Migration Stream*

Brady J. Deaton and Kurt R. Anschel

Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics, 1974, vol. 6, issue 1, 185-191

Abstract: Most studies of the economics of migration have implicitly assumed that migratory streams are homogeneous. However, migratory streams from one region to another consist of two distinct streams: a stream of first-time migrants and a stream of return migrants moving back to their area of origin. In fact, a substantial proportion of all U.S. migration is return migration, 14 percent from 1955 to 1960. Moreover, in states with histories of substantial out-migration, an even greater proportion of in-migrants are returnees, 35.4 percent between 1955 and 1960. Yet, economists have largely ignored return migration in their attempts to explain changes in the labor force.

Date: 1974
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