New paper finds evidence that amenities drive household migration
May 16, 2009 at 9:51 am | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment“Local amenities and life-cycle migration: Do people move for jobs or fun?,” by Yong Chen and Stuart Rosenthal, published recently in the Journal of Urban Economics, uses national data from 1970 to 2000 to track household migration patterns. From the abstract: Do households move for jobs or fun, and where do they go when they move? We address these questions using the 1970–2000 US Census. Based on a panel of quality of life and business environment measures, households prefer MSAs in warm coastal areas and non-metropolitan locations, while firms prefer large, growing cities. In addition, cities with improving business environments acquire increasing shares of workers, especially workers with high levels of human capital; cities with improving consumer amenities become relatively more populated by retirees. Further analysis of individual level migration decisions indicates that regardless of marital status, young, highly educated households tend to move towards places with higher quality business environments. This tendency is especially pronounced among highly educated couples who are more subject to job market co-location problems. In contrast, regardless of education, couples near retirement tend to move away from places with favorable business environments and towards places with highly valued consumer amenities. These patterns help explain why areas unattractive to both households and business have struggled, as with upstate New York, while the sun-belt and other regions are thriving.
NYT Magazine personal account of foreclosure crisis
May 16, 2009 at 9:35 am | Posted in neighborhoods | Leave a comment
Edmund Andrews, an economics reporter for the New York Times, is facing foreclosure, after a series of bad decisions regarding the purchase of his house in DC. A first-person account in the NYT Magazine reveals how the organizational incentives of his mortgage broker generated options that seemed too good to pass up. If a well-paid, well-informed expert whose job it was to follow the actions of the Federal Reserve for the nation’s newspaper of record could hit rock bottom, how should we expect low-income neighborhoods to fare? See this report.
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