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Heterogeneity in Education-Driven Residential Mobility: Evidence from Tianjin Under China’s School District System

Yue Yin, Sihang Yu () and Tao Sun
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Yue Yin: Zhou Enlai School of Government, Nankai University, Tianjin 300350, China
Sihang Yu: School of Economics and Management, Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen), Shenzhen 518055, China
Tao Sun: School of Economics and Management, Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen), Shenzhen 518055, China

Sustainability, 2025, vol. 17, issue 18, 1-22

Abstract: Education has become one of the important drivers of residential mobility. The school district system in China has transformed school choice into a competition for housing ownership based on family capital, resulting in the capitalization of education and gentrification. Understanding the patterns of education-driven residential mobility is therefore of significant importance for urban planning, educational policy and social equity research. In this study, we depicted and analyzed the heterogeneity of residential mobility formed by the interaction of schooling choice, diversity of family characteristics, and housing preferences. Based on the household questionnaire survey conducted in Tianjin, we identified five typical education-driven residential mobility patterns by using the K-Prototype clustering algorithm. The empirical results implied that in China, particularly in megacities like Tianjin with a strict school district system tied to housing, wealthy families approach high-quality education through their socio-economic advantages for cultural reproduction; families sacrifice living conditions to access leading schools by acquiring old second-hand housing or smaller new-commercial housing; lower-income families relocate to within a short distance of the city center to change home ownership status for basic school eligibility; and families opting out of school districts achieve residential improvements and display greater locational diversity in relocation. Education-driven residential mobility is reshaping urban space, and may intensify socio-spatial stratification, even influencing long-term urban sustainability through patterns of resource allocation, neighborhood stability, and social equity. While this study focuses on Tianjin, the impacts of such school-housing-linked policies hold broader relevance for global cities facing similar challenges.

Keywords: education-driven residential mobility; housing choice; residential relocation; residential segregation; urban sustainability (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O13 Q Q0 Q2 Q3 Q5 Q56 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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