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Population Review

Volume 49, Number 2, 2010

E-ISSN: 1549-0955 Print ISSN: 0032-471X

DOI: 10.1353/prv.0.0023

Shrinidhi Ambinakudige
Domenico Parisi
Internal Migration Effectiveness and Income Effectiveness in the Most Populous Cities in the United States
Population Review - Volume 49, Number 2, 2010

Population Review Publications

Abstract:

In this study, migration data compiled by the Internal Revenue Serve (IRS) and the US Census Bureau for 2006-07 were used to analyse internal migration patterns using migration and income effectiveness for the counties containing the 25 most populous cities in the United States. The results indicated that both large metropolitan and rural counties have lost population and income due to migration. Small metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties closer to cities gained population and income. Counties in South Florida attracted a large number of higher-income migrants from the largest cities in the US. In the last 13 years, New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, the three most populous cities in the US, had negative migration effectiveness. Suburban areas and second-tier cities continued to attract people from large metropolitan areas.


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