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Distance and intrastate college student migration

James Alm () and John Winters

Economics of Education Review, 2009, vol. 28, issue 6, 728-738

Abstract: Most studies of student migration focus on interstate migration of college students, largely because the aggregate data typically used are limited in geographic specificity to states. However, interstate migration is only a small part of the total student migration. Public institutions generally get most of their students from within their state; for example, 88 percent of first-time freshmen who enrolled in University System of Georgia institutions in 2002 graduated from Georgia schools. Such intrastate migration is seldom considered. This paper examines intrastate college student migration, using data for Georgia. Aside from such traditional measures of benefits and costs like tuition, financial aid, and school quality, a crucial explanatory variable in our analysis is the distance from a student's home to the different Georgia state institutions. Our empirical results indicate that student intrastate migration is strongly discouraged by greater distance, but with effects that differ across types of higher education institutions.

Keywords: College; education; Mobility; Gravity; model; Intrastate; migration (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (50)

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